کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
4345248 | 1296719 | 2011 | 5 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |
We describe psychophysical performance of two stroke patients with lesions in distinct cortical regions in the left hemisphere. Both patients were selectively impaired on direction discrimination in several local and global second-order but not first-order motion tasks. However, only patient FD was impaired on a specific bi-stable motion task where the direction of motion is biased by object similarity. We suggest that this bi-stable motion task may be mediated by a high-level attention or position based mechanism indicating a separate neurological substrate for a high-level attention or position-based mechanism. Therefore, these results provide evidence for the existence of at least three motion mechanisms in the human visual system: a low-level first- and second-order motion mechanism and a high-level attention or position-based mechanism.
► Two stroke patients with distinct lesions.
► Both patients impaired in variety of second-order but not first-order motion tasks.
► One patient impaired on a specific bi-stable motion task.
► Bi-stable motion task mediated by third-order attention or position-based mechanism.
► Neurological evidence for three motion mechanisms.
Journal: Neuroscience Letters - Volume 495, Issue 2, 16 May 2011, Pages 102–106