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Effects of prismatic adaptation on spatial gradients in unilateral neglect: A comparison of visual and auditory target detection with central attentional load
Authors:Ranmalee Eramudugolla  Angela Boyce  Dexter R.F. Irvine  Jason B. Mattingley
Affiliation:a Queensland Brain Institute, The University of Queensland, St Lucia 4072, Australia
b School of Psychology, The University of Queensland, St Lucia 4072, Australia
c Geriatric and Rehabilitation Unit, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Woolloongabba 4102, Australia
d School of Psychology and Psychiatry, Monash University, Clayton 3800, Australia
e The Bionic Ear Institute, 384-388 Albert St, East Melbourne 3002, Australia
Abstract:Prismatic adaptation is increasingly recognised as an effective procedure for rehabilitating symptoms of unilateral spatial neglect - producing relatively long-lasting improvements on a variety of spatial attention tasks. The mechanisms by which the aftereffects of adaptation change neglect patients’ performance on these tasks remain controversial. It is not clear, for example, whether adaptation directly influences the pathological ipsilesional attention bias that underlies neglect, or whether it simply changes exploratory motor behaviour. Here we used visual and auditory versions of a target detection task with a secondary task at fixation. Under these conditions, patients with neglect demonstrated a spatial gradient in their ability to orient to the brief, peripheral visual or auditory targets. Following prism adaptation, we found that overall performance on both the auditory and visual task improved, however, most patients in our sample did not show changes in their visual or auditory spatial gradient of attention, despite adequate aftereffects of adaptation and significant improvement in neglect on visual cancellation. Although there were individual cases that suggested prism-induced changes in visual target detection, and even reversal of the visual spatial gradient, such cases were not evident for the auditory modality. The findings indicate that spatial gradients in stimulus-driven attention may be less responsive to the effects of prism adaptation than neglect symptoms in voluntary orienting and exploratory behaviour. Individual factors such as lesion site and symptom severity may also determine the expression of prism effects on spatial neglect.
Keywords:Unilateral spatial neglect   Auditory perception   Visual attention   Attentional load   Prism adaptation
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