Cerebral Cortex, Vol 7, 253-267, Copyright © 1997 by Oxford University Press
MW Greenlee, M Koessler, FW Cornelissen and T Mergner
Visual discrimination and short-term recognition memory for computer-
generated random patterns were explored in 23 patients with a postsurgical
lesion in one of the cortical hemispheres. Their results are compared with
those of 23 age-matched volunteers. In a same- different forced-choice
discrimination task, d' and log beta (measures of sensitivity and bias), as
well as reaction time (RT) were determined. All participants viewed
patterns defined either by luminance contrast or isoluminant red-green
color contrast, the amplitude of which was adjusted to be 10 times the
respective detection threshold level. Block patterns consisting of a 6 x 6
matrix of light and dark (red and green) checks were randomly configured on
each presentation. They were presented in pairs, randomly in two visual
quadrants for a duration of 200 msec. Three presentation conditions were
used: simultaneous presentation of reference and test stimulus, sequential
presentation with a short delay (interstimulus interval, ISI = 3 s), and
sequential presentation with a long delay (ISI = 6 s). The results indicate
that patients with a lesion in the occipitotemporal cortex, the superior
temporal cortex and the frontal cortex were significantly impaired on both
luminance-contrast and color-contrast pattern discrimination. Patients with
damage in the anterior inferotemporal cortex showed no overall impairment.
The results suggest that performance in visual discrimination and
recognition memory tasks rely on distributed neural processes with more
than one neocortical location.
ARTICLES
Visual discrimination and short-term memory for random patterns in patients with a focal cortical lesion
Neurologische Universitat Klinik, Freiburg, Germany.
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