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RESEARCH PRODUCT

The middle house or the middle floor: Bisecting horizontal and vertical mental number lines in neglect

Lisa CipolottiLisa CipolottiElliot D. FreemanMarinella Cappelletti

subject

MaleTask-dependencePhysical lineHorizontal and verticalCognitive NeuroscienceBisectionmedia_common.quotation_subjectExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyGeometryNeuropsychological TestsArticleFunctional LateralityStatistics Nonparametric050105 experimental psychologyNeglectPerceptual DisordersNumber line03 medical and health sciencesBehavioral Neuroscience0302 clinical medicineOrientationOrientation (geometry)medicineBisectionHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesNeglectAgedmedia_commonSettore M-PSI/02 - Psicobiologia E Psicologia Fisiologica05 social sciencesNeglect Number line Physical line Bisection Number cognition Task-dependenceHemispatial neglectCerebral InfarctionMiddle AgedNumber cognitionHematoma SubduralUnilateral neglectSpace PerceptionBrain Damage ChronicFemalemedicine.symptomLine (text file)PsychologySocial psychologyNumber lineMathematicsPsychomotor Performance030217 neurology & neurosurgery

description

Abstract This study explores the processing of mental number lines and physical lines in five patients with left unilateral neglect. Three tasks were used: mental number bisection (‘report the middle number between two numbers’), physical line bisection (‘mark the middle of a line’), and a landmark task (‘is the mark on the line to the left/right or higher/lower than the middle of the line?’). We manipulated the number line orientation purely by task instruction: neglect patients were told that the number-pairs represented either houses on a street (horizontal condition) or floors in a building (vertical condition). We also manipulated physical line orientation for comparison. All five neglect patients showed a rightward bias for horizontally oriented physical and number lines (e.g. saying ‘five’ is the middle house number between ‘two’ and ‘six’). Only three of these patients also showed an upward bias for vertically oriented number lines. The remaining two patients did not show any bias in processing vertical lines. Our results suggest that: (1) horizontal and vertical neglect can associate or dissociate among different patients; (2) bisecting number lines operates on internal horizontal and vertical representations possibly analogous to horizontal and vertical physical lines; (3) at least partially independent mechanisms may be involved in processing horizontal and vertical number lines.

10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2007.05.014http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2007.05.014