Auditory inattention in right-hemisphere-damaged patients with and without visual neglect

N. Soroker, N. Calamaro, J. Glicksohn, M. S. Myslobodsky

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

62 Scopus citations

Abstract

Fifteen right-hemispherer-damaged patients, eight with- and seven without visual neglect (N+ and N-, respectively), were assessed for the presence of auditory neglect using free-held bilateral simultaneous stimulation (BSS) and pseudorandom unilateral stimulation. Eight healthy subjects served as controls. Both N+ and N- groups extinguished left-sided sound stimuli in the BSS condition. N+ (but not N-) patients showed a right-side advantage in sound localization and were inferior, compared to normal individuals, in their ability to localize unilaterally administered sounds on the left side. Blindfolding significantly improved the localization performance. In a task demanding stimulus identification, both N+ and N- groups performed abnormally when auditory stimuli came from the left. Free-held stimulation is thus an adequate technique for the detection of auditory neglect. The results are consistent with the notion that left-sided neglect reflects a pathologically exaggerated attentional bias towards the right in normal individuals.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)249-256
Number of pages8
JournalNeuropsychologia
Volume35
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 1997

Keywords

  • Auditory neglect
  • Spatial attention
  • Stroke
  • Unilateral visual neglect

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