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Form completion across a hemianopic boundary: behindsight?

Form completion across a hemianopic boundary: behindsight?
Form completion across a hemianopic boundary: behindsight?
Patients with homonymous hemianopia may report the completion of forms that overlap the vertical meridian of their field defects. While previous investigations of “hemianopic completion” have variously attributed to the disorder to inattention, residual vision or unstable fixation, we believe that our investigation has controlled for such potentially confounding factors. We report patient P.O.V. who experienced hemianopic completion in everyday life following a surgical lesion of his left occipital lobe. He showed normal spatial attention and normal spatial orienting: hemianopic completion can therefore occur in the absence of inattention. His completion was retinotopic and affected partial as well as complete forms: his hemianopic completion cannot be attributed to residual visual input or poor fixation. P.O.V.'s completion was also systematically affected by varying stimulus contrast and pattern masking. We argue that while other explanations may be appropriate for different cases, P.O.V.'s hemianopic completion reflects normal “constructive” visual processes and can be attributed to the unconstrained operation of visual routines that are normally involved in the perception of partially occluded forms. As such, this disorder has the potential to shed light on some of the most basic aspects of visual perception.
vision, mid-level vision, perception, completion, hemianopia, visuo-spatial neglect, spatial cognition
0028-3932
1269-1281
McCarthy, Rosaleen A.
5377d3de-2597-4427-801b-6b4c61058568
James-Galton, Merle
42fdae90-9829-4db6-a4fd-c466ab3b2ab9
Plant, Gordon T.
77ec5d65-d1b7-4acd-a1f3-e04227b00d02
McCarthy, Rosaleen A.
5377d3de-2597-4427-801b-6b4c61058568
James-Galton, Merle
42fdae90-9829-4db6-a4fd-c466ab3b2ab9
Plant, Gordon T.
77ec5d65-d1b7-4acd-a1f3-e04227b00d02

McCarthy, Rosaleen A., James-Galton, Merle and Plant, Gordon T. (2006) Form completion across a hemianopic boundary: behindsight? Neuropsychologia, 44 (8), 1269-1281. (doi:10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2006.01.036).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Patients with homonymous hemianopia may report the completion of forms that overlap the vertical meridian of their field defects. While previous investigations of “hemianopic completion” have variously attributed to the disorder to inattention, residual vision or unstable fixation, we believe that our investigation has controlled for such potentially confounding factors. We report patient P.O.V. who experienced hemianopic completion in everyday life following a surgical lesion of his left occipital lobe. He showed normal spatial attention and normal spatial orienting: hemianopic completion can therefore occur in the absence of inattention. His completion was retinotopic and affected partial as well as complete forms: his hemianopic completion cannot be attributed to residual visual input or poor fixation. P.O.V.'s completion was also systematically affected by varying stimulus contrast and pattern masking. We argue that while other explanations may be appropriate for different cases, P.O.V.'s hemianopic completion reflects normal “constructive” visual processes and can be attributed to the unconstrained operation of visual routines that are normally involved in the perception of partially occluded forms. As such, this disorder has the potential to shed light on some of the most basic aspects of visual perception.

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More information

Published date: 2006
Keywords: vision, mid-level vision, perception, completion, hemianopia, visuo-spatial neglect, spatial cognition

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 45726
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/45726
ISSN: 0028-3932
PURE UUID: 8b92fd99-3ba3-4ebf-8c5f-46cf41892752

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Date deposited: 30 Mar 2007
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 09:12

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Contributors

Author: Rosaleen A. McCarthy
Author: Merle James-Galton
Author: Gordon T. Plant

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