TY - JOUR PY - 2010// TI - The neural basis of perceptual bias and response bias in the Landmark task JO - Neuropsychologia A1 - Vossel, Simone A1 - Eschenbeck, Philipp A1 - Weiss, P. H. A1 - Fink, G. R. SP - 3949 EP - 3954 VL - 48 IS - 13 N2 - Spatial neglect as a multifaceted syndrome may consist of perceptual/attentional as well as motor/intentional components. The present study investigated the lesion anatomy underlying perceptual and response bias using a manual response landmark task (Bisiach, E., Ricci, R., Lualdi, M. & Colombo, M.R. (1998). Perceptual and response bias in unilateral neglect: two modified versions of the Milner Landmark task. Brain & Cognition, 37, 369-386) in 68 patients with right-hemispheric stroke. The two differential aspects of the neglect syndrome were assessed by measuring response tendencies resulting from underestimations of the length of left line segments and from hypometric movement execution towards contralesional space, respectively. Perceptual and response bias were orthogonal components of task performance in the landmark task. Perceptual as well as response bias both explained variance in the performance of standard paper-and-pencil neglect tests. While lesions within middle frontal, inferior parietal and parieto-occipital brain regions were related to perceptual bias, subcortical lesions within the caudate, internal capsule and putamen were associated with response bias in the landmark task. Our data suggest that perceptual/attentional and motor/intentional aspects of neglect are independent components of the syndrome with differential neural underpinnings in fronto-parietal and subcortical brain regions.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 0028-3932 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2010.09.022 ID - ref1 ER -