neglect

Don't judge a book by its cover. factitious disorder imposed on children-report on 2 cases

Factitious Disorder Imposed on Another (FDIA), also known as Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy (MSbP) is a very serious form of child abuse. The perpetrator, usually the mother, invents symptoms or causes real ones in order to make her child appear sick. Usually this is due to a maladaptive disorder or to an excessive of attention-seeking on her part. We report here two new cases of FDIA.

Effects of prism adaptation on reference systems for extrapersonal space in neglect patients

Up to now, rehabilitation of unilateral spatial neglect has focused on egocentric forms of neglect, whereas less is known about the possibility to improve allocentric deficits. The present study aimed to examine the efficacy of prism adaptation (PA) training on patients with different forms of neglect: egocentric, allocentric, or mixed. Twenty-eight patients were assessed with specific neglect tests before (T0) and after (T1) 10 sessions of PA training.

Using task-based fMRI to understand attentional mechanisms in healthy controls

Background. Hemispatial neglect is a complex syndrome associated with a reduced capability to orient attentional resources toward the contralateral side of space, that involves a collection of symptoms. We used three functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) tasks (i.e., visual search, VS; line bisection, LB; extinction, EX), performed by 25 healthy subjects, to investigate the behavioral and neural correlates under these symptoms. Procedure. During fMRI, participants were presented with: 1.

Changes in predictive cuing modulate the hemispheric distribution of the P1 inhibitory response to attentional targets

Brain activity related to orienting of attention with spatial cues and brain responses to attentional targets are influenced the probabilistic contingency between cues and targets. Compared to predictive cues, cues predicting at chance the location of targets reduce the filtering out of uncued locations and the costs in reorienting attention to targets presented at these locations. Slagter et al.

The assessment of hemineglect syndrome with cancellation tasks. A comparison between the bells test and the Apples test

Unilateral spatial neglect (USN) is a frequent consequence of acquired brain injury, especially following right hemisphere damage. Traditionally, unilateral spatial neglect is assessed with cancellation tests such as the Bells test. Recently, a new cancellation test, the Apples test, has been proposed. The present study aims at comparing the accuracy of these two tests in detecting hemispatial neglect, on a sample of 56 right hemisphere stroke patients with a diagnosis of USN.

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