Optic Ataxia: From Balint’s Syndrome to the Parietal Reach Region
نویسندگان
چکیده
Optic ataxia is a high-order deficit in reaching to visual goals that occurs with posterior parietal cortex (PPC) lesions. It is a component of Balint's syndrome that also includes attentional and gaze disorders. Aspects of optic ataxia are misreaching in the contralesional visual field, difficulty preshaping the hand for grasping, and an inability to correct reaches online. Recent research in nonhuman primates (NHPs) suggests that many aspects of Balint's syndrome and optic ataxia are a result of damage to specific functional modules for reaching, saccades, grasp, attention, and state estimation. The deficits from large lesions in humans are probably composite effects from damage to combinations of these functional modules. Interactions between these modules, either within posterior parietal cortex or downstream within frontal cortex, may account for more complex behaviors such as hand-eye coordination and reach-to-grasp.
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Balint’s syndrome is clinically designated in a category containing three major signs: inability to scan the visual field in spite of normal eye-movement (fixed gaze or psychic paralysis), impaired simultaneous perception of more than one or a few objects (simultagnosia), and defection of visual guided reach (optic ataxia or misreaching). A defective estimation of distance is considered to be a...
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عنوان ژورنال:
- Neuron
دوره 81 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2014