Reply: ‘The anatomy underlying acute versus chronic spatial neglect’ also depends on clinical tests
Author(s) -
HansOtto Karnath,
Johannes Rennig,
L. Johannsen,
Chris Rorden
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
brain
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.142
H-Index - 336
eISSN - 1460-2156
pISSN - 0006-8950
DOI - 10.1093/brain/awr230
Subject(s) - cognitive psychology , psychology , neglect , right hemisphere , perception , neuroscience , psychiatry
Sir, earlier this year we published the first longitudinal study of spatial neglect in your journal (Karnath et al ., 2011). Longitudinal studies of this profoundly debilitating disorder are crucial to unlock one of the great mysteries of this disorder: some individuals spontaneously recover while others are left with long-term deficits. Recently, Saj et al . (2011) responded to our work, noting that there are actually a variety of attentional deficits that are common following right hemisphere brain injury. Saj et al . (2011) warn that scientists need to be careful that they do not pool across different underlying syndromes, which may each rely on different anatomy and exhibit different patterns of recovery. We think their recent work adds to a growing consensus regarding the complex interaction of anatomy, recovery phase and symptoms observed following right hemisphere injury. While we believe this type of work will prove theoretically crucial (demonstrating the unique functional roles of different anatomical nodes) and clinically vital (providing improved long-term prognosis based on acute behaviour and acute imaging), we do think it is appropriate to fully describe the historical precedence for Saj et al .'s (2011) work. Further, we describe some of the methodological advances required in order to accurately address the issues raised by these authors.Saj et al .'s (2011) work hinges on the idea that there is not a single, unitary perceptual deficit associated with right hemisphere damage, but rather a series of relatively independent syndromes. Indeed, one of the striking features of right hemisphere injury is the variability of the symptoms observed. For example, stimuli might be missed on the left side of the patient's space (egocentric neglect) or the left side of individual stimuli might be ignored regardless of position with respect to the body (object-centred or allocentric neglect). There is …
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