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Visually misguided reaching in Balint's syndrome.

G C Baylis1, L L Baylis

  • 1Department of Psychology, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC 29208, USA. gordon@sc.edu

Neuropsychologia
|May 23, 2001
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

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Balint's Syndrome, a condition from parietal damage, impairs visual spatial representation. Despite this, one patient showed intact motor control for reaching, suggesting a disconnect between visual processing and action.

Area of Science:

  • Neuroscience
  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Ophthalmology

Background:

  • Balint's Syndrome is a rare neurological disorder resulting from bilateral parietal lobe damage.
  • It is characterized by simultagnosia, optic ataxia, and oculomotor apraxia, severely impacting visual attention and spatial awareness.

Observation:

  • A patient (RM) with Balint's Syndrome was evaluated for visual-spatial abilities, focusing on reaching and target localization.
  • RM demonstrated a significant deficit in describing target locations compared to reaching for them.
  • Interestingly, he performed better when reaching for targets without visual guidance than with it.

Findings:

  • The patient exhibited preserved motor control for reaching, despite profound deficits in visual spatial representation.
  • RM displayed intact inhibition of responses to non-target stimuli, even with poor depth perception.

Related Experiment Videos

  • This led to ignoring stimuli in a given direction, irrespective of target or non-target status.
  • Implications:

    • These findings suggest that the reaching control system can remain relatively intact even when visual spatial representation is severely disrupted.
    • The study highlights a potential dissociation between visual perception and motor execution in Balint's Syndrome.
    • It provides insights into the neural mechanisms underlying spatial awareness and visually guided actions.