Cognitive assessment in a clinical setting is generally made by pencil-and-paper tests, while computer-based tests enable the measurement and the extraction of additional performance indexes. Previous studies have demonstrated that in a research context exploration deficits occur also in patients without evidence of unilateral neglect at pencil-and-paper tests. The objective of this study is to apply a touchscreen-based cancellation test, feasible also in a clinical context, to large groups of control subjects and unilaterally brain-damaged patients, with and without unilateral spatial neglect (USN), in order to assess disturbances of the exploratory skills. A computerized cancellation test on a touchscreen interface was used for assessing the performance of 119 neurologically unimpaired control subjects and 193 patients with unilateral right or left hemispheric brain damage, either with or without USN. A set of performance indexes were defined including Latency, Proximity, Crossings and their spatial lateral gradients, and Preferred Search Direction. Classic outcome scores were computed as well. Results show statistically significant differences among groups (assumed p<0.05). Right-brain-damaged patients with USN were significantly slower (median latency per detected item was 1.18 s) and less efficient (about 13 search-path crossings) in the search than controls (median latency 0.64 s; about 3 crossings). Their preferred search direction (53.6% downward, 36.7% leftward) was different from the one in control patients (88.2% downward, 2.1% leftward). Right-brain-damaged patients without USN showed a significantly abnormal behavior (median latency 0.84 s, about 5 crossings, 83.3% downward and 9.1% leftward direction) situated half way between controls and right-brain-damaged patients with USN. Left-brain-damaged patients without USN were significantly slower and less efficient than controls (latency 1.19 s, about 7 crossings), preserving a normal preferred search direction (93.7% downward). Therefore, the proposed touchscreen-based assessment had evidenced disorders in spatial exploration also in patients without clinically diagnosed USN.
References
[1]
Bisiach E, Vallar G (2000) Unilateral neglect in humans. In: Boller F, Grafman J, Rizzolatti G, editors. Handbook of neuropsychology, 2nd edn, vol. 1. Elsevier Science, Amsterdam. pp. 459–502.
[2]
Heilman KM, Watson RT, Valenstein E (2003) Neglect and related disorders. In: Heilman KM, Valenstein E, editors. Clinical neuropsychology. Oxford University Press, New York. pp. 296–346.
[3]
Husain M (2008) Hemispatial neglect. In: Goldenberg G, Miller BL, editors. Handbook of clinical neurology, vol 88. Elsevier, Amsterdam. pp. 359–372.
[4]
Albert ML (1973) A simple test of visual neglect. Neurology 23: 658–664.
[5]
Vallar G, Perani D (1986) The anatomy of unilateral neglect after right hemisphere stroke lesions. A clinical CT/Scan correlation study in man. Neuropsychologia 24: 609–622.
[6]
Diller L, Weinberg J (1977) Hemi-inattention in rehabilitation. The evolution of a rational remediation program. In: Weinstein EA, Friedland RP, editors. Hemi-inattention and hemisphere specialization. Raven Press, New York. pp. 62–82.
[7]
Wilson B, Cockburn J, Halligan PW (1987) Behavioural inattention test. Titchfield, Hampshire, UK: Thames Valley Test Company.
[8]
Gauthier L, Dehaut F, Joanette Y (1989) The Bells Test: A quantitative and qualitative test for visual neglect. International Journal of Clinical Neuropsychology 11: 49–54.
[9]
Weintraub S, Mesulam MM (1988) Visual hemispatial inattention: stimulus parameters and exploratory strategies. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 51(12): 1481–1488.
[10]
Barrett AM, Buxbaum LJ, Coslett HB, Edwards E, Heilman KM, et al. (2006) Cognitive rehabilitation interventions for neglect and related disorders: moving from bench to bedside in stroke patients. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 18, 7: 1223–1236.
[11]
Azouvi P, Samuel C, Dreyfus AL, Bernati T, Bartolomeo P, et al. (2002) Sensitivity of clinical and behavioural tests of spatial neglect after right hemisphere stroke. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry 73: 160–166.
[12]
Adair JC, Barrett AM (2008) Spatial neglect: clinical and neuroscience review. Annals of the New York Academy of Science 1142: 21–43.
[13]
Husain M, Mannan S, Hodgson T, Wojciulik E, Driver J, et al. (2001) Impaired spatial working memory across saccades contributes to abnormal search in parietal neglect. Brain 124(5): 941–952.
[14]
Malhotra P, Jager HR, Parton A, Greenwood R, Playford ED, et al. (2005) Spatial working memory capacity in unilateral neglect. Brain 128(2): 424–435.
[15]
Hillstrom AP, Husain M, Shapiro KL, Rorden C (2004) Spatiotemporal dynamics of attention in visual neglect: a case study. Cortex 40(3): 433–440.
[16]
Konczak J, Himmelbach M, Perenin MT, Karnath HO (1999) Do patients with neglect show abnormal hand velocity profiles during tactile exploration of peripersonal space? Experimental Brain Research 128(1–2): 219–23.
[17]
Berti A, Smania N, Rabuffetti M, Ferrarin M, Spinazzola L, et al. (2002) Coding of far and near space during walking in neglect patients. Neuropsychology 16(3): 390–399.
[18]
Mattingley JB, Bradshaw JL, Bradshaw JA, Nettleton NC (1994) Residual rightward attentional bias after apparent recovery from right hemisphere damage: implications for a multicomponent model of neglect. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry 57(5): 597–604.
[19]
Lafosse C, Kerckhofs E, Troch M, Vandenbussche E (2003) Upper limb exteroceptive somatosensory and proprioceptive sensory afferent modulation of hemispatial neglect. Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology 25(3): 308–323.
[20]
Schendel KL, Robertson LC (2002) Using reaction time to assess patients with unilateral neglect and extinction. Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology 24(7): 941–950.
[21]
Làdavas E, Petronio A, Umiltà C (1990) The deployment of visual attention in the intact field of hemineglect patients. Cortex 26(3): 307–317.
[22]
Behrmann M, Meegan DV (1998) Visuomotor processing in unilateral neglect. Consciousness and Cognition 7: 381–409.
[23]
Husain M, Mattingley JB, Rorden C, Kennard C, Driver J (2000) Distinguishing sensory and motor biases in parietal and frontal neglect. Brain 123(8): 1643–1659.
[24]
Deouell LY, Sacher Y, Soroker N (2005) Assessment of spatial attention after brain damage with a dynamic reaction time test. Journal Of The International Neuropsychological Society 11: 697–707.
[25]
Ptak R, Golay L (2006) Temporal dynamics of attentional control settings in patients with spatial neglect. Brain Research 1092: 190–197.
[26]
Eramudugolla R, Mattingley JB (2008) Spatial gradient for unique-feature detection in patients with unilateral neglect: evidence from auditory and visual search. Neurocase 15(1): 24–31.
[27]
Erez ABH, Katz N, Ring H, Soroker N (2009) Assessment of spatial neglect using computerised feature and conjunction visual search tasks. Neuropsychological Rehabilitation 19, 5: 677–695.
[28]
Shimodozono M, Matsumoto S, Miyata R, Etoh S, Tsujio S, Kawahira K (2006) Perceptual, premotor and motor factors in the performance of a delayed-reaching task by subjects with unilateral spatial neglect. Neuropsychologia 44(10): 1752–1764.
[29]
Halligan PW, Burn JP, Marshall JC, Wade DT (1992) Visuo-spatial neglect: qualitative differences and laterality of cerebral lesion. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry 55: 1060–1068.
[30]
Butler BC, Eskes GA, Vandorpe RA (2004) Gradients of detection in neglect: comparison of peripersonal and extrapersonal space. Neuropsychologia 42(3): 346–358.
[31]
Sarri M, Greenwood R, Kalra L, Driver J (2009) Task-related modulation of visual neglect in cancellation tasks. Neuropsychologia 47(1): 91–103.
[32]
Samuelsson H, Hjelmquist EK, Jensen C, Blomstrand C (2002) Search pattern in a verbally reported visual scanning test in patients showing spatial neglect. Journal of the International Neuropsycholical Society 8(3): 382–394.
[33]
Donnelly N, Guest R, Fairhurst M, Potter J, Deighton A, et al. (1999) Developing algorithms to enhance the sensitivity of cancellation tests of visuospatial neglect. Behavior Research Methods, Instruments, & Computers 31: 668–673.
[34]
Guest RM, Fairhurst MC, Potter JM (2002) Diagnosis of visuo-spatial neglect using dynamic sequence features from a cancellation task. Pattern Analysis And Applications 5(3): 261–270.
[35]
Liang Y, Guest RM, Fairhurst MC, Potter JM (2007) Feature-based assessment of visuo-spatial neglect patients using hand-drawing tasks. Pattern Analysis and Applications 10(4): 361–374.
[36]
Mapstone M, Weintraub S, Nowinski C, Kaptanoglu G, Gitelman DR, Mesulam MM (2003) Cerebral hemispheric specialization for spatial attention: spatial distribution of search-related eye fixations in the absence of neglect. Neuropsychologia 41(10): 1396–1409.
[37]
Behrmann M, Watt S, Black SE, Barton JJS (1997) Impaired visual search in patients with unilateral neglect: an oculographic analysis. Neuropsvchologia 35, 11: 1445–1458.
[38]
Müri RM, Cazzoli D, Nyffeler T, Pfugshaupt T (2009) Visual exploration pattern in hemineglect. Psychological Research 73: 147–157.
[39]
Karnath HO, Niemeier M, Dichgans J (1998) Space exploration in neglect. Brain 121(12): 2357–2367.
[40]
Parton A, Malhotra P, Nachev P, Ames D, Ball J, et al. (2006) Space re-exploration in hemispatial neglect. Neuroreport 17(8): 833–836.
[41]
Mark VW, Woods AJ, Ball KK, Roth DL, Mennemeier M (2004) Disorganized search on cancellation is not a consequence of neglect. Neurology 63(1): 78–84.
[42]
Woods AJ, Mark VW (2007) Convergent validity of executive organization measures on cancellation. Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology 29(7): 719–723.
[43]
Manly T, Dove A, Blows S, George M, Noonan MP, et al. (2009) Assessment of unilateral spatial neglect: scoring star cancellation performance from video recordings–method, reliability, benefits, and normative data. Neuropsychology 23(4): 519–528.
[44]
Rabuffetti M, Ferrarin M, Spadone R, Pellegatta D, Gentileschi V, et al. (2002) Touch-screen system for assessing visuo-motor exploratory skills in neuropsychological disorders of spatial cognition. Medical and Biological Engineering and Computing 40(6): 675–686.
[45]
Pignatti R, Rabuffetti M, Imbornone E, Mantovani F, Alberoni M, et al. (2005) Specific impairments of selective attention in mild Alzheimer's disease. Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology 27(4): 436–448.
[46]
Folstein MF, Folstein SE, Mchugh PR (1975) Mini-mental state. A practical method for grading the cognitive state of patients for the clinician. Journal of Psychiatric. Research 12: 189–198.
[47]
Measso G, Cavarzeran F, Zappalà G, Lebowitz BD, Crook TH, et al. (1993) The mini-mental state examination: normative study of an Italian random sample. Developmental Neuropsychology 9: 77–85.
[48]
Vallar G, Rusconi ML, Fontana S, Musicco M (1994) Tre test di esplorazione visuo-spaziale: taratura su 212 soggetti normali. Archivio di Psicologia, Neurologia e Psichiatria 55: 827–841.
[49]
Massironi M, Antonucci G, Pizzamiglio L, Vitale MV, Zoccolotti PL (1988) The Wundt-Jastrow illusion in the study of spatial hemi-inattention, Neuropsychologia 26: 161–166.
[50]
Zoccolotti P, Antonucci G, Judica A, Montenero P, Pizzamiglio L, et al. (1989) Incidence and evolution of the hemi-neglect disorder in chronic patients with unilateral right brain-damage. International Journal of Neuroscience 47: 209–216.
[51]
Siegel S, Castellan NJ (1988) “Nonparametric Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences” (second edition). New York: McGraw–Hill.
[52]
Larose DT (2006) Data mining methods and models. John Wiley & Sons Inc.
[53]
Potter J, Deighton T, Patel M, Fairhurst M, Guest R, et al. (2000) Computer recording of standard tests of visual neglect in stroke patients. Clinical Rehabilitation 14: 441–446.
[54]
Kinsbourne M (1987) Mechanisms of unilateral neglect. In: Jeannerod M, editor. Neurophysiological and neuropsychological aspects of spatial neglect. Elsevier, Amsterdam. pp. 69–86.
[55]
Kinsbourne M (1993) Orientational bias model of unilateral neglect: evidence from attentional gradients within hemi-space. In: Robertson IH, Marshall JC, editors. Unilateral neglect: clinical and experimental studies. Lawrence Erlbaum, Hillsdale, NJ. pp. 63–86.
[56]
Eglin M, Robertson LC, Knight RT, Brugger P (1994) Search deficits in neglect patients are dependent on size of the visual scene. Neuropsychology 4: 451–463.
[57]
Sunderland A (2000) Recovery of ipsilateral dexterity after stroke. Stroke 31(2): 430–3.
[58]
Cherney LR (2004) Aphasia, alexia, and oral reading. Topics Stroke Rehabil 11(1): 22–36. Review.
[59]
Blangero A, Ota H, Rossetti Y, Fujii T, Ohtake H, et al. (2010) Systematic retinotopic reaching error vectors in unilateral optic ataxia. Cortex 46(1): 77–93.
[60]
Lanyon LJ, Denham SL (2010) Modelling Visual Neglect: Computational Insights into Conscious Perception. PLoS ONE 5(6): e11128.