89 results on '"Posteraro, L."'
Search Results
2. A new case of atypical cerebral dominance
- Author
-
Posteraro L. and Maravita A.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Hyperattention in Neglect Patients: Perceptual or Pre-Motor Phenomenon?
- Author
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Cavina-Pratesi, C., Bonato, E., Bricolo, E., Prior, M., Posteraro, L., and Marzi, C.A.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Talking to the senses: Modulation of tactile extinction through hypnotic suggestion
- Author
-
Maravita, A, Cigada, M, Posteraro, L, MARAVITA, ANGELO, Posteraro, L., Maravita, A, Cigada, M, Posteraro, L, MARAVITA, ANGELO, and Posteraro, L.
- Abstract
Following brain damage, typically of the right hemisphere, patients can show reduced awareness of sensory events occurring in the space contralateral to the brain damage. The present work shows that a hypnotic suggestion can temporarily reduce tactile extinction to double bilateral stimulation, i.e., a loss of contralesional stimuli when these are presented together with ipsilesional ones. Patient EB showed an improved detection of contralesional targets after a single 20-min hypnosis session, during which specific suggestions were delivered with the aim of increasing her insight into somatosensory perception on both sides of the body. Simple overt attention orienting toward the contralesional side, or a hypnotic induction procedure not accompanied by specifically aimed suggestions, were not effective in modulating extinction. The present result is the first systematic evidence that hypnosis can temporarily improve a neuropsychological condition, namely Extinction, and may open the way for the use of this technique as a fruitful rehabilitative tool for brain-damaged patients affected by neuropsychological deficits
- Published
- 2012
5. The spatial encoding of body parts in patients with neglect
- Author
-
SPOSITO, AMBRA VALENTINA, BOLOGNINI, NADIA, VALLAR, GIUSEPPE, Posteraro, L, MARAVITA, ANGELO, Sposito, A, Bolognini, N, Vallar, G, Posteraro, L, and Maravita, A
- Subjects
Space coding ,Spatial impairment ,Multisensory integration ,Body representation ,Unilateral spatial neglect ,M-PSI/02 - PSICOBIOLOGIA E PSICOLOGIA FISIOLOGICA - Abstract
Body parts are represented in the brain in a very specific fashion, as compared to other three-dimensional objects, with reference to their prototypic shape and multisensory coding. However, evidence is lacking about the spatial representation of body parts. To address this issue, in Experiment I we first compared the metric representation of body parts and of non-bodily objects in 14 right-brain-damaged patients with left unilateral spatial neglect (USN), and in 14 neurologically unimpaired control participants. Participants bisected, by manual pointing, a three-dimensional object, or their own left forearm. Patients showed the well-known ipsilesional rightward displacement of the subjective midpoint, in both forearm and solid bisection. Both USN patients and control participants were overall more accurate in the bisection of their own forearm, relative to the extracorporeal object. in four patients this advantage of the forearm was significant in a single-case analysis, while two patients showed the opposite dissociation, being more accurate with the solid object. In Experiment 2 neurologically unimpaired participants were more accurate in the bisection of a fake forearm, as well as of their own forearm, as compared to the extrapersonal object. Overall, the results indicate that the representation of the metric of the body is more reliable than that of extrapersonal objects, and also more resistant to the disruption of spatial representations brought about by USN, possibly due to the prototypical shape of body parts. Furthermore, the double dissociation found in USN patients suggests that the metrics of body parts and of extrapersonal objects are supported by independent spatial processes. (C) 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2010
6. Bisezione di segmenti corporei ed extracorporei in pazienti con negligenza spaziale unilaterale: ruolo dell' integrazione multisensoriale nella rappresentazione spaziale del corpo
- Author
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SPOSITO, AMBRA VALENTINA, BOLOGNINI, NADIA, VALLAR, GIUSEPPE, MARAVITA, ANGELO, Posteraro, L, Sposito, A, Bolognini, N, Posteraro, L, Vallar, G, and Maravita, A
- Subjects
analisi spaziale, rappresentazione corporea, negligenza spaziale unilaterale - Published
- 2007
7. Bisection of corporeal and extra-corporeal objects in neglect patients: role of multisensory integration in the spatial representation of the body
- Author
-
SPOSITO, AMBRA VALENTINA, BOLOGNINI, NADIA, VALLAR, GIUSEPPE, MARAVITA, ANGELO, Posteraro, L, Sposito, A, Bolognini, N, Posteraro, L, Vallar, G, and Maravita, A
- Subjects
Spatial processing, Body Representation, Multisensory integration, Unilateral Spatial Neglect - Published
- 2007
8. Familial Alzheimer disease affecting only females
- Author
-
Posteraro L., Guareschi P., Poletti A., and Mazzucchi A.
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Transient bacteraemia due toChryseobacterium indologenesin an immunocompetent patient: a case report and literature review
- Author
-
Esposito, Silvano, primary, Russo, E., additional, De Simone, G., additional, Gioia, R., additional, Noviello, S., additional, Vitolo, M., additional, Rega, M. R., additional, Massari, A., additional, and Posteraro, L., additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Visual and spatial modulation of tactile extinction: behavioural and electrophysiological evidence
- Author
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Sambo, C, Vallar, G, Fortis, P, Ronchi, R, Posteraro, L, Forster, B, Maravita, A, VALLAR, GIUSEPPE, FORTIS, PAOLA, RONCHI, ROBERTA, MARAVITA, ANGELO, Sambo, C, Vallar, G, Fortis, P, Ronchi, R, Posteraro, L, Forster, B, Maravita, A, VALLAR, GIUSEPPE, FORTIS, PAOLA, RONCHI, ROBERTA, and MARAVITA, ANGELO
- Abstract
Crossing the hands over the midline reduces left tactile extinction to double simultaneous stimulation in right-brain-damaged patients, suggesting that spatial attentional biases toward the ipsilesional (right) side of space contribute to the patients' contralesional (left) deficit. We investigated (1) whether the position of the left hand, and its vision, affected processing speed of tactile stimuli, and (2) the electrophysiological underpinnings of the effect of hand position. (1) Four right-brain-damaged patients with spatial neglect and contralesional left tactile extinction or somatosensory deficits, and eight neurologically unimpaired participants, performed a speeded detection task on single taps delivered on their left index finger. In patients, placing the left hand in the right (heteronymous) hemi-space resulted in faster reaction times (RTs) to tactile stimuli, compared to placing that hand in the left (homonymous) hemi-space, particularly when the hand was visible. By contrast, in controls placing the left hand in the heteronymous hemi-space increased RTs. (2) Somatosensory event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded from one patient and two controls in response to the stimulation of the left hand, placed in the two spatial positions. In the patient, the somatosensory P70, N140, and N250 components were enhanced when the left hand was placed in the heteronymous hemi-space, whereas in controls these components were not modulated by hand position. The novel findings are that in patients placing the left hand in the right, ipsilesional hemi-space yields a temporal advantage in processing tactile stimuli, and this effect may rely on a modulation of stimulus processing taking place as early as in the primary somatosensory cortex, as indexed by evoked potentials. Furthermore, vision enhances tactile processing specifically when the left hand is placed in the hemi-space toward which the patients' attentional biases are pathologically directed, namely rightwar
- Published
- 2012
11. Touch to See: Neuropsychological Evidence of a Sensory Mirror System for Touch
- Author
-
Bolognini, N, Olgiati, E, Xaiz, A, Posteraro, L, Ferraro, F, Maravita, A, BOLOGNINI, NADIA, XAIZ, ANNALISA, MARAVITA, ANGELO, Bolognini, N, Olgiati, E, Xaiz, A, Posteraro, L, Ferraro, F, Maravita, A, BOLOGNINI, NADIA, XAIZ, ANNALISA, and MARAVITA, ANGELO
- Abstract
The observation of touch can be grounded in the activation of brain areas underpinning direct tactile experience, namely the somatosensory cortices. What is the behavioral impact of such a mirror sensory activity on visual perception? To address this issue, we investigated the causal interplay between observed and felt touch in right brain-damaged patients, as a function of their underlying damaged visual and/or tactile modalities. Patients and healthy controls underwent a detection task, comprising visual stimuli depicting touches or without a tactile component. Touch and No-touch stimuli were presented in egocentric or allocentric perspectives. Seeing touches, regardless of the viewing perspective, differently affects visual perception depending on which sensory modality is damaged: In patients with a selective visual deficit, but without any tactile defect, the sight of touch improves the visual impairment; this effect is associated with a lesion to the supramarginal gyrus. In patients with a tactile deficit, but intact visual perception, the sight of touch disrupts visual processing, inducing a visual extinction-like phenomenon. This disruptive effect is associated with the damage of the postcentral gyrus. Hence, a damage to the somatosensory system can lead to a dysfunctional visual processing, and an intact somatosensory processing can aid visual perception. © The Author 2011. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2012
12. La microchirurgia endoscopio-assistita nel trattamento degli aneurismi intracranici
- Author
-
Galzio, Renato, Ricci, A, Posteraro, L, Pipola, M, Rustia, A, and Scogna, A.
- Published
- 2000
13. Il trattamento chirurgico dell'instabilità lombare post discectomia
- Author
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Galzio, Renato, Ricci, A, Posteraro, L, Pipola, M, Rustia, A, and Scogna, A.
- Published
- 2000
14. Criteri di scelta dell'approccio chirurgico nelle lesioni del III ventricolo
- Author
-
Galzio, Renato, Ricci, A, Posteraro, L, Pipola, M, Rustia, A, and Scogna, A.
- Published
- 2000
15. The spatial encoding of body parts in patients with neglect and neurologically unimpaired participants
- Author
-
Sposito, A, Bolognini, N, Posteraro, L, Vallar, G, Maravita, A, SPOSITO, AMBRA VALENTINA, BOLOGNINI, NADIA, VALLAR, GIUSEPPE, MARAVITA, ANGELO, Sposito, A, Bolognini, N, Posteraro, L, Vallar, G, Maravita, A, SPOSITO, AMBRA VALENTINA, BOLOGNINI, NADIA, VALLAR, GIUSEPPE, and MARAVITA, ANGELO
- Published
- 2010
16. Rehabilitating Patients With Left Spatial Neglect by Prism Exposure During a Visuomotor Activity
- Author
-
Fortis, P, Maravita, A, Gallucci, M, Ronchi, R, Grassi, E, Senna, I, Olgiati, E, Perucca, L, Banco, E, Posteraro, L, Tesio, L, Vallar, G, MARAVITA, ANGELO, GALLUCCI, MARCELLO, VALLAR, GIUSEPPE, Fortis, P, Maravita, A, Gallucci, M, Ronchi, R, Grassi, E, Senna, I, Olgiati, E, Perucca, L, Banco, E, Posteraro, L, Tesio, L, Vallar, G, MARAVITA, ANGELO, GALLUCCI, MARCELLO, and VALLAR, GIUSEPPE
- Abstract
Objective: Adaptation to prisms displacing the visual scene rightward is a therapeutic tool for left unilateral spatial neglect (USN). We aimed at comparing the effects of the classic adaptation procedure (repeated pointing toward visual targets, control treatment, C), with those of a novel adaptation method, involving ecological visuomotor activities (experimental treatment, E). Method: In 10 right-brain-damaged USN patients, each treatment was given for 1 week, with a crossover design, for a total of 20 sessions, twice per day. USN was assessed by cancellation, reading, and drawing tasks, and by a standardized scale. Neurological severity was assessed by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) stroke scale (Brott et al., 1989), disability by the Functional Independence Measure (FIM) scale. Results: The 2-week treatments (EC, CE) were equally effective, improving both USN, confirming previous reports (Frassinetti, Angeli, Meneghello, Avanzi, & Làdavas, 2002) and, importantly, disability. The improvement was independent of baseline performance, duration of disease, and neurological severity. Recovery took place after the first week, continued in the second week, and was stable at the follow-up of 3 months. The improvement of USN, measured by cancellation performance, and, in part, that of disability, measured through the FIM scale, were mediated by the size of the leftward aftereffects, suggesting a causal relationship between prism exposure and recovery. The E protocol was better tolerated. Conclusions: Daily life visuomotor activities, associated with prism exposure, are a useful tool for rehabilitating USN patients. This new treatment may widen the compliance with prism exposure treatments and their feasibility within home-based programs.
- Published
- 2010
17. The spatial encoding of body parts in patients with neglect
- Author
-
Sposito, A, Bolognini, N, Vallar, G, Posteraro, L, Maravita, A, SPOSITO, AMBRA VALENTINA, BOLOGNINI, NADIA, VALLAR, GIUSEPPE, MARAVITA, ANGELO, Sposito, A, Bolognini, N, Vallar, G, Posteraro, L, Maravita, A, SPOSITO, AMBRA VALENTINA, BOLOGNINI, NADIA, VALLAR, GIUSEPPE, and MARAVITA, ANGELO
- Abstract
Body parts are represented in the brain in a very specific fashion, as compared to other three-dimensional objects, with reference to their prototypic shape and multisensory coding. However, evidence is lacking about the spatial representation of body parts. To address this issue, in Experiment I we first compared the metric representation of body parts and of non-bodily objects in 14 right-brain-damaged patients with left unilateral spatial neglect (USN), and in 14 neurologically unimpaired control participants. Participants bisected, by manual pointing, a three-dimensional object, or their own left forearm. Patients showed the well-known ipsilesional rightward displacement of the subjective midpoint, in both forearm and solid bisection. Both USN patients and control participants were overall more accurate in the bisection of their own forearm, relative to the extracorporeal object. in four patients this advantage of the forearm was significant in a single-case analysis, while two patients showed the opposite dissociation, being more accurate with the solid object. In Experiment 2 neurologically unimpaired participants were more accurate in the bisection of a fake forearm, as well as of their own forearm, as compared to the extrapersonal object. Overall, the results indicate that the representation of the metric of the body is more reliable than that of extrapersonal objects, and also more resistant to the disruption of spatial representations brought about by USN, possibly due to the prototypical shape of body parts. Furthermore, the double dissociation found in USN patients suggests that the metrics of body parts and of extrapersonal objects are supported by independent spatial processes. (C) 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2010
18. Perseveration in left spatial neglect: Drawing and cancellation tasks
- Author
-
Ronchi, R, Posteraro, L, Fortis, P, Bricolo, E, Vallar, G, RONCHI, ROBERTA, FORTIS, PAOLA, BRICOLO, EMANUELA, VALLAR, GIUSEPPE, Ronchi, R, Posteraro, L, Fortis, P, Bricolo, E, Vallar, G, RONCHI, ROBERTA, FORTIS, PAOLA, BRICOLO, EMANUELA, and VALLAR, GIUSEPPE
- Abstract
Perseveration in target cancellation tasks and in drawing by copy and from memory was investigated in 21 right-brain-damaged patients, seven with no evidence of left visuo-spatial neglect, and 14 with neglect. Eight such neglect patients showed perseveration in both cancellation and drawing tasks, although no correlation was found with the severity of neglect. Patients with perseveration were not disproportionately impaired in tasks assessing executive (fluency, Stroop colour-word interference, and Weigl's sorting test), and visuo-spatial short-term memory function. In the context of a two-component hypothesis, graphic perseveration (the first component) is a specific disorder that manifests in a variety of tasks, particularly those requiring serial graphic production. Unilateral spatial neglect (the second component) may trigger and facilitate the production of perseveration errors, with a contra-ipsilateral gradient of increasing severity.
- Published
- 2009
19. Bisection of corporeal and extra-corporeal objects in neglect patients: role of multisensory integration in the spatial representation of the body
- Author
-
Sposito, A, Bolognini, N, Posteraro, L, Vallar, G, Maravita, A, SPOSITO, AMBRA VALENTINA, BOLOGNINI, NADIA, VALLAR, GIUSEPPE, MARAVITA, ANGELO, Sposito, A, Bolognini, N, Posteraro, L, Vallar, G, Maravita, A, SPOSITO, AMBRA VALENTINA, BOLOGNINI, NADIA, VALLAR, GIUSEPPE, and MARAVITA, ANGELO
- Published
- 2007
20. Bisezione di segmenti corporei ed extracorporei in pazienti con negligenza spaziale unilaterale: ruolo dell' integrazione multisensoriale nella rappresentazione spaziale del corpo
- Author
-
Sposito, A, Bolognini, N, Posteraro, L, Vallar, G, Maravita, A, SPOSITO, AMBRA VALENTINA, BOLOGNINI, NADIA, VALLAR, GIUSEPPE, MARAVITA, ANGELO, Sposito, A, Bolognini, N, Posteraro, L, Vallar, G, Maravita, A, SPOSITO, AMBRA VALENTINA, BOLOGNINI, NADIA, VALLAR, GIUSEPPE, and MARAVITA, ANGELO
- Published
- 2007
21. Hydromyelia Secondary to Spinal Epidural Abscess
- Author
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Saponiero, R., primary, Toriello, A., additional, Locatelli, G., additional, Narciso, N., additional, Posteraro, L., additional, Panza, M. P., additional, Napoli, A.N., additional, Romano, F., additional, and Pugliese, N.D., additional
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Distal Anterior Cerebral Artery Aneurysms: Endovascular or Surgical Treatment?
- Author
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Saponiero, R., primary, Toriello, A., additional, Locatelli, G., additional, Pugliese, N.D., additional, Napoli, A.N., additional, Napoli, M., additional, Siani, A., additional, Cuomo, G., additional, Panza, M.P., additional, Narciso, N., additional, and Posteraro, L., additional
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Looking at human eyes affects contralesional stimulus processing after right hemispheric stroke
- Author
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Maravita, A., primary, Posteraro, L., additional, Husain, M., additional, Vuilleumier, P., additional, Schwartz, S., additional, and Driver, J., additional
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Rightward and leftward bisection biases in spatial neglect: two sides of the same coin?
- Author
-
Savazzi, S., primary, Posteraro, L., additional, Veronesi, G., additional, and Mancini, F., additional
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Esperienza di embolizzazione di aneurismi “large” del circolo carotideo
- Author
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Sirabella, G., primary, Saponiero, R., additional, Napoli, A.N., additional, Simonetti, L., additional, Briganti, F., additional, Posteraro, L., additional, and Granieri, U., additional
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Transient bacteraemia due to Chryseobacterium indologenesin an immunocompetent patient: a case report and literature review
- Author
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Esposito, Silvano, Russo, E., De Simone, G., Gioia, R., Noviello, S., Vitolo, M., Rega, M. R., Massari, A., and Posteraro, L.
- Abstract
A 51-year-old woman was admitted to the emergency unit with diffuse headache, visus reduction, and paraesthesias of the trigeminal area and the left hand. Three days after admission she showed shaking chills, vomiting, and sudden onset of fever (39·4°C). Blood cultures were performed soon after fever onset. Fever persisted for the whole day, decreasing slowly after 12 hours. No empirical antibiotic treatment was started in order to better define the diagnosis. Fever completely disappeared the day after. Two blood cultures for aerobes were positive for Chryseobacterium indologenes. The patient was discharged with the diagnosis of transient bacteraemia and transferred to the neurology unit for further investigations. C. indologenesinfections are described in 31 studies with a total of 171 cases (pneumonia and bacteraemia being the most frequent). Our case is the first report of transient bacteraemia caused by C. indologenesin an immunocompetent, non-elderly patient without needing medical devices.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Rightward and leftward bisection biases in spatial neglect: two sides of the same coin?
- Author
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Savazzu S, Posteraro L, Veronesi G, and Mancini F
- Published
- 2007
28. L'aachner Aphasie Test (Aat) II. Proprietà Psicometriche Della Versione Italiana
- Author
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Luzzatti, C, Willmes, K, Bisiacchi, Patrizia, DE BLESER, R, Faglia, L, Mazzucchi, A, Posteraro, L, and Taricco, M.
- Published
- 1987
29. Aphasia quality of life: Reliability of the Italian version of SAQOL-39
- Author
-
Posteraro, L., Formis, A., Bidini, C., Grassi, E., Curti, M., Bighi, M., Maurizio Agosti, and Franceschini, M.
30. Quality of life and aphasia. Multicentric standardization of a questionnaire
- Author
-
Posteraro, L., Formis, A., Grassi, E., Bighi, M., Nati, P., Proietti Bocchini, C., Todeschini, E., Bidini, C., Corsini, D., Agosti, M., and Marco Franceschini
31. Unilateral Visual Agnosia
- Author
-
Mazzucchi, A., primary, Posteraro, L., additional, Nuzzi, G., additional, and Parma, M., additional
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. THE NATURE OF HYPERATTENTION IN THE IPSILESIONAL VISUAL HEMIFIELD OF NEGLECT PATIENTS.
- Author
-
Natale, E., Cavina-Pratesi, C., Maravita, A., Manganotti, P., Posteraro, L., Smania, N., and Marzi, C. A.
- Published
- 1999
33. Esperienza di embolizzazione di aneurismi “large” del circolo carotideo
- Author
-
Sirabella, G., Saponiero, R., Napoli, A.N., Simonetti, L., Briganti, F., Posteraro, L., and Granieri, U.
- Abstract
Gli autori propongono una casistica di embolizzazione di 5 aneurismi “large” del circolo carotideo. Vengono analizzati:il proprio protocollo di preparazione del paziente;problemi tecnici di approccio all'aneurisma;pregi e difetti del materiale usato (spirale MTS e GDC);problemi collegati alla taglia dell'aneurisma, con particolare riguardo alle difficoltà di stabilire quando l'embolizzazione può essere considerata soddisfacente.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Touch to See: Neuropsychological Evidence of a Sensory Mirror System for Touch
- Author
-
Francesco Ferraro, Lucio Posteraro, Annalisa Xaiz, Nadia Bolognini, Elena Olgiati, Angelo Maravita, Bolognini, N, Olgiati, E, Xaiz, A, Posteraro, L, Ferraro, F, and Maravita, A
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Visual perception ,genetic structures ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Sensory system ,Audiology ,M-PSI/02 - PSICOBIOLOGIA E PSICOLOGIA FISIOLOGICA ,Somatosensory system ,Visual processing ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Stimulus modality ,crossmodal, mirror neuron system, somatosensory cortex, touch observation, visual processing ,Supramarginal gyrus ,medicine ,Humans ,Mirror Neurons ,Brain Mapping ,Crossmodal ,Postcentral gyrus ,Somatosensory Cortex ,Middle Aged ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,eye diseases ,Touch ,Visual Perception ,Female ,Psychology ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
The observation of touch can be grounded in the activation of brain areas underpinning direct tactile experience, namely the somatosensory cortices. What is the behavioral impact of such a mirror sensory activity on visual perception? To address this issue, we investigated the causal interplay between observed and felt touch in right brain-damaged patients, as a function of their underlying damaged visual and/or tactile modalities. Patients and healthy controls underwent a detection task, comprising visual stimuli depicting touches or without a tactile component. Touch and No-touch stimuli were presented in egocentric or allocentric perspectives. Seeing touches, regardless of the viewing perspective, differently affects visual perception depending on which sensory modality is damaged: In patients with a selective visual deficit, but without any tactile defect, the sight of touch improves the visual impairment; this effect is associated with a lesion to the supramarginal gyrus. In patients with a tactile deficit, but intact visual perception, the sight of touch disrupts visual processing, inducing a visual extinction-like phenomenon. This disruptive effect is associated with the damage of the postcentral gyrus. Hence, a damage to the somatosensory system can lead to a dysfunctional visual processing, and an intact somatosensory processing can aid visual perception. © The Author 2011. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Rehabilitating patients with left spatial neglect by prism exposure during a visuomotor activity
- Author
-
Marcello Gallucci, Irene Senna, Elena Grassi, Elena Olgiati, Laura Perucca, Angelo Maravita, Roberta Ronchi, Lucio Posteraro, Luigi Tesio, Elisabetta Banco, Giuseppe Vallar, Paola Fortis, Fortis, P, Maravita, A, Gallucci, M, Ronchi, R, Grassi, E, Senna, I, Olgiati, E, Perucca, L, Banco, E, Posteraro, L, Tesio, L, and Vallar, G
- Subjects
Male ,Optics and Photonics ,Prism Adaptation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Visuospatial neglect ,genetic structures ,medicine.medical_treatment ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Neurological disorder ,Neuropsychological Tests ,M-PSI/02 - PSICOBIOLOGIA E PSICOLOGIA FISIOLOGICA ,Severity of Illness Index ,Functional Laterality ,Visually guided movement ,Developmental psychology ,Neglect ,Perceptual Disorders ,Negligenza spaziale unilaterale, lesione emisferica destra, movimento guidato dalla visione, adattamento, riabilitazione ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Severity of illness ,medicine ,Humans ,Adaptation ,Neurorehabilitation ,Aged ,media_common ,Aged, 80 and over ,Neurologic Examination ,Rehabilitation ,medicine.disease ,Adaptation, Physiological ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Crossover study ,Functional Independence Measure ,M-PSI/03 - PSICOMETRIA ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Reading ,Space Perception ,Rehabilitation of Unilateral Spatial Neglect ,Right hemisphere lesion ,Female ,Psychology ,Prism adaptation ,Photic Stimulation ,Psychomotor Performance ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Objective: Adaptation to prisms displacing the visual scene rightward is a therapeutic tool for left unilateral spatial neglect (USN). We aimed at comparing the effects of the classic adaptation procedure (repeated pointing toward visual targets, control treatment, C), with those of a novel adaptation method, involving ecological visuomotor activities (experimental treatment, E). Method: In 10 right-brain-damaged USN patients, each treatment was given for 1 week, with a crossover design, for a total of 20 sessions, twice per day. USN was assessed by cancellation, reading, and drawing tasks, and by a standardized scale. Neurological severity was assessed by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) stroke scale (Brott et al., 1989), disability by the Functional Independence Measure (FIM) scale. Results: The 2-week treatments (EC, CE) were equally effective, improving both USN, confirming previous reports (Frassinetti, Angeli, Meneghello, Avanzi, & Làdavas, 2002) and, importantly, disability. The improvement was independent of baseline performance, duration of disease, and neurological severity. Recovery took place after the first week, continued in the second week, and was stable at the follow-up of 3 months. The improvement of USN, measured by cancellation performance, and, in part, that of disability, measured through the FIM scale, were mediated by the size of the leftward aftereffects, suggesting a causal relationship between prism exposure and recovery. The E protocol was better tolerated. Conclusions: Daily life visuomotor activities, associated with prism exposure, are a useful tool for rehabilitating USN patients. This new treatment may widen the compliance with prism exposure treatments and their feasibility within home-based programs.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Talking to the senses: Modulation of tactile extinction through hypnotic suggestion
- Author
-
Mario Cigada, Lucio Posteraro, Angelo Maravita, Maravita, A, Cigada, M, and Posteraro, L
- Subjects
Hypnosis ,tactile extinction ,medicine.drug_class ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Sensory system ,Brain damage ,Brain-damage ,M-PSI/02 - PSICOBIOLOGIA E PSICOLOGIA FISIOLOGICA ,lcsh:RC321-571 ,Hypnotic ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Neuropsychology ,medicine ,Tactile extinction ,Original Research Article ,lcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,Biological Psychiatry ,Rehabilitation ,medicine.disease ,hypnosis, neuropsychology, brain-damage, tactile extinction, rehabilitation ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Neurology ,Extinction (neurology) ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Brain damage can significantly impair the processing of sensory events. In particular, patients affected by extinction to double bilateral stimulations, show reduced awareness of stimuli delivered in the space contralateral to the brain lesion, when these are presented in competition with ipsilesional ones. The present work shows that hypnotic suggestion can temporarily improve tactile extinction. Patient EB showed an improved detection of contralesional targets after a single 20-minute hypnosis session, during which specific suggestions were delivered with the aim of increasing her insight into somatosensory perception on both sides of the body. Simple overt attention orienting towards the contralesional side, or a hypnotic induction procedure not accompanied by specifically aimed suggestions, were not effective in modulating extinction. The present result is the first systematic evidence that hypnosis can temporarily improve a neuropsychological condition, namely extinction, and may open the way for the use of this technique as a fruitful rehabilitative tool for brain-damaged patients affected by neuropsychological deficits.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Visual and spatial modulation of tactile extinction: behavioural and electrophysiological evidence
- Author
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Chiara Francesca Sambo, Giuseppe eVallar, Paola eFortis, Roberta eRonchi, Lucio ePosteraro, Bettina eForster, Angelo eMaravita, Sambo, C, Vallar, G, Fortis, P, Ronchi, R, Posteraro, L, Forster, B, and Maravita, A
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,tactile extinction ,BF ,Audiology ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Somatosensory system ,M-PSI/02 - PSICOBIOLOGIA E PSICOLOGIA FISIOLOGICA ,Simultaneous stimulation ,lcsh:RC321-571 ,hand crossing ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,medicine ,Tactile extinction ,In patient ,Original Research Article ,lcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,Biological Psychiatry ,space ,ERPs ,Spatial modulation ,attention ,multisensory ,attention, ERPs, hand crossing, multisensory, space, tactile extinction ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Electrophysiology ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Neurology ,Psychology ,Tactile processing ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Crossing the hands over the midline reduces left tactile extinction to double simultaneous stimulation in right-brain-damaged patients, suggesting that spatial attentional biases toward the ipsilesional (right) side of space contribute to the patients' contralesional (left) deficit. We investigated (1) whether the position of the left hand, and its vision, affected processing speed of tactile stimuli, and (2) the electrophysiological underpinnings of the effect of hand position. (1) Four right-brain-damaged patients with spatial neglect and contralesional left tactile extinction or somatosensory deficits, and eight neurologically unimpaired participants, performed a speeded detection task on single taps delivered on their left index finger. In patients, placing the left hand in the right (heteronymous) hemi-space resulted in faster reaction times (RTs) to tactile stimuli, compared to placing that hand in the left (homonymous) hemi-space, particularly when the hand was visible. By contrast, in controls placing the left hand in the heteronymous hemi-space increased RTs. (2) Somatosensory event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded from one patient and two controls in response to the stimulation of the left hand, placed in the two spatial positions. In the patient, the somatosensory P70, N140, and N250 components were enhanced when the left hand was placed in the heteronymous hemi-space, whereas in controls these components were not modulated by hand position. The novel findings are that in patients placing the left hand in the right, ipsilesional hemi-space yields a temporal advantage in processing tactile stimuli, and this effect may rely on a modulation of stimulus processing taking place as early as in the primary somatosensory cortex, as indexed by evoked potentials. Furthermore, vision enhances tactile processing specifically when the left hand is placed in the hemi-space toward which the patients' attentional biases are pathologically directed, namely rightwards.
- Published
- 2012
38. The spatial encoding of body parts in patients with neglect and neurologically unimpaired participants
- Author
-
A Sposito, Angelo Maravita, Nadia Bolognini, Giuseppe Vallar, Lucio Posteraro, Sposito, A, Bolognini, N, Posteraro, L, Vallar, G, and Maravita, A
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Dissociation (neuropsychology) ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Spatial Behavior ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Functional Laterality ,Neglect ,Developmental psychology ,Perceptual Disorders ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Forearm ,Physical Stimulation ,medicine ,Humans ,In patient ,media_common ,Aged ,Unilateral spatial neglect ,Aged, 80 and over ,Human Body ,Analysis of Variance ,Spatial encoding ,Multisensory integration ,Cognition ,Middle Aged ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Space Perception ,Spatial processing, Body Representation, Multisensory integration, Unilateral Spatial Neglect ,Female ,Psychology ,Psychomotor Performance - Abstract
Body parts are represented in the brain in a very specific fashion, as compared to other three-dimensional objects, with reference to their prototypic shape and multisensory coding. However, evidence is lacking about the spatial representation of body parts. To address this issue, in Experiment 1 we first compared the metric representation of body parts and of non-bodily objects in 14 right-brain-damaged patients with left unilateral spatial neglect (USN), and in 14 neurologically unimpaired control participants. Participants bisected, by manual pointing, a three-dimensional object, or their own left forearm. Patients showed the well-known ipsilesional rightward displacement of the subjective midpoint, in both forearm and solid bisection. Both USN patients and control participants were overall more accurate in the bisection of their own forearm, relative to the extracorporeal object. In four patients this advantage of the forearm was significant in a single-case analysis, while two patients showed the opposite dissociation, being more accurate with the solid object. In Experiment 2 neurologically unimpaired participants were more accurate in the bisection of a fake forearm, as well as of their own forearm, as compared to the extrapersonal object. Overall, the results indicate that the representation of the metric of the body is more reliable than that of extrapersonal objects, and also more resistant to the disruption of spatial representations brought about by USN, possibly due to the prototypical shape of body parts. Furthermore, the double dissociation found in USN patients suggests that the metrics of body parts and of extrapersonal objects are supported by independent spatial processes.
- Published
- 2010
39. Perseveration in left spatial neglect: drawing and cancellation tasks
- Author
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Giuseppe Vallar, Roberta Ronchi, Paola Fortis, Emanuela Bricolo, Lucio Posteraro, Ronchi, R, Posteraro, L, Fortis, P, Bricolo, E, and Vallar, G
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,unilateral spatial neglect ,Visual perception ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Perseveration ,Target cancellation and Drawing tasks ,target cancellation task ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Context (language use) ,perseveration ,Neuropsychological Tests ,M-PSI/02 - PSICOBIOLOGIA E PSICOLOGIA FISIOLOGICA ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Severity of Illness Index ,Functional Laterality ,Neglect ,Perceptual Disorders ,Fluency ,Drawing Tasks ,Memory ,medicine ,Humans ,media_common ,Aged ,Unilateral spatial neglect ,right brain damage ,Aged, 80 and over ,Brain Diseases ,drawing task ,Brain ,Middle Aged ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Space Perception ,Visual Perception ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Visual Fields ,Psychology ,psychological phenomena and processes ,Psychomotor Performance ,Cognitive psychology ,Stroop effect - Abstract
Perseveration in target cancellation tasks and in drawing by copy and from memory was investigated in 21 right-brain-damaged patients, seven with no evidence of left visuo-spatial neglect, and 14 with neglect. Eight such neglect patients showed perseveration in both cancellation and drawing tasks, although no correlation was found with the severity of neglect. Patients with perseveration were not disproportionately impaired in tasks assessing executive (fluency, Stroop colour-word interference, and Weigl's sorting test), and visuo-spatial short-term memory function. In the context of a two-component hypothesis, graphic perseveration (the first component) is a specific disorder that manifests in a variety of tasks, particularly those requiring serial graphic production. Unilateral spatial neglect (the second component) may trigger and facilitate the production of perseveration errors, with a contra-ipsilateral gradient of increasing severity.
- Published
- 2007
40. Safe return to driving following severe acquired brain injury: role of a short neuropsychological assessment.
- Author
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Saviola D, De Tanti A, Conforti J, Posteraro L, Manfredini A, Bagattini C, and Basagni B
- Subjects
- Adult, Attention, Automobile Driver Examination, Cognition, Executive Function, Female, Humans, Male, Psychomotor Performance, Automobile Driving psychology, Brain Injuries physiopathology, Neuropsychological Tests
- Abstract
Background: Driving is a complex ability requiring a broad range of motor, cognitive-behavioral and visual skills that may be impaired after severe acquired brain injury (sABI). Resumption of driving is perceived as a major need by patients, being closely linked to personal autonomy, work and social activities., Aim: The objective of this study was to identify a short battery of neuropsychological tests with predictive value with regard to safe return to driving after sABI., Design: Observational study., Setting: Outpatient of a rehabilitation center for sABI., Population: A continuous series of 127 patients with stable sABI, well-reintegrated at a family and social level, dismissed since at least one year from the end of their intensive rehabilitation, enrolled between 2006 and 2014., Methods: Patients underwent an extensive battery of neuropsychological tests (pencil and paper and specific PC programs), aimed at assessing cognitive functions, in performance and verbal tasks. The results were analyzed in relation to their on-road performance during the driving test conducted by the office of the Italian Government Authority (success or failure of the test)., Results: No correlations were found between demographic data, etiology, driving experience, verbal competence and the decision of the competent authority. Significant correlation was found between attention, executive functions, overall visual-spatial exploration and driving performance., Conclusions: Both "pencil and paper" and computerized tests in the cognitive domains of attentive functions, and those involving performance with visual-spatial material, are significantly correlated with the driving test outcome, even if there is not enough evidence of the relative value of off-road compared to direct on-road tests., Clinical Rehabilitation Impact: We propose a small neuropsychological battery of tests with normative data for Italian population, predictive with respect to the ability to drive safely. We recommend to use it as first screening before submitting patients to more demanding and risky on-road driving tests.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Transient bacteraemia due to Chryseobacterium indologenes in an immunocompetent patient: a case report and literature review.
- Author
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Esposito S, Russo E, De Simone G, Gioia R, Noviello S, Vitolo M, Rega MR, Massari A, and Posteraro L
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Bacteremia diagnosis, Bacteremia immunology, Catheter-Related Infections microbiology, Chills microbiology, Chryseobacterium pathogenicity, Clinical Studies as Topic, Cross Infection microbiology, Female, Fever microbiology, Flavobacteriaceae Infections diagnosis, Flavobacteriaceae Infections immunology, Humans, Immunocompromised Host, Middle Aged, Vomiting microbiology, Bacteremia microbiology, Chryseobacterium isolation & purification, Flavobacteriaceae Infections microbiology, Immunocompetence
- Abstract
A 51-year-old woman was admitted to the emergency unit with diffuse headache, visus reduction, and paraesthesias of the trigeminal area and the left hand. Three days after admission she showed shaking chills, vomiting, and sudden onset of fever (39·4°C). Blood cultures were performed soon after fever onset. Fever persisted for the whole day, decreasing slowly after 12 hours. No empirical antibiotic treatment was started in order to better define the diagnosis. Fever completely disappeared the day after. Two blood cultures for aerobes were positive for Chryseobacterium indologenes. The patient was discharged with the diagnosis of transient bacteraemia and transferred to the neurology unit for further investigations. C. indologenes infections are described in 31 studies with a total of 171 cases (pneumonia and bacteraemia being the most frequent). Our case is the first report of transient bacteraemia caused by C. indologenes in an immunocompetent, non-elderly patient without needing medical devices.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. The two sides of spatial representation in neglect patients: the same spatial distortion for different patterns of performance.
- Author
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Manfredini A, Mancini F, Posteraro L, and Savazzi S
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Analysis of Variance, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Neuropsychological Tests, Photic Stimulation, Reading, Vocabulary, Brain Injuries complications, Functional Laterality physiology, Perceptual Disorders etiology, Space Perception physiology
- Abstract
Patients with neglect show disorders in horizontal space perception. It has been argued that these disorders may depend on a distortion of space that takes the form of a left-right relaxation of the representational medium that becomes progressively "relaxed" toward the contralesional space and progressively "compressed" toward the ipsilesional space (the space anisometry hypothesis). In the present paper we tested this hypothesis by using the Oppel-Kundt illusion that consists of the perception of a filled space as larger than an empty space of the same size. Two experiments were carried out with 14 brain-damaged patients with neglect, 9 brain-damaged patients without neglect and 12 healthy subjects. In the first experiment participants were requested to bisect and read words with different letter spacing simulating the way space is thought to be distorted in neglect. In the second experiment we asked the participants to physically and numerically bisect numerical intervals. The results of the two experiments are in line with the predictions of the space anisometry hypothesis. Specifically, with a background resembling the space distortion proposed by the space anisometry hypothesis, neglect signs are ameliorated in reading words and in numerically bisect numerical intervals, while they are worsened in bisecting words and physically bisect numerical intervals. These results support the idea that the abnormalities observed in typical neglect tests are due to a distorted internal representation of the outside world that takes the form of a mental continuum logarithmically distorted along the horizontal dimension., (Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Touch to see: neuropsychological evidence of a sensory mirror system for touch.
- Author
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Bolognini N, Olgiati E, Xaiz A, Posteraro L, Ferraro F, and Maravita A
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Brain Mapping, Mirror Neurons physiology, Somatosensory Cortex physiology, Touch physiology, Visual Perception physiology
- Abstract
The observation of touch can be grounded in the activation of brain areas underpinning direct tactile experience, namely the somatosensory cortices. What is the behavioral impact of such a mirror sensory activity on visual perception? To address this issue, we investigated the causal interplay between observed and felt touch in right brain-damaged patients, as a function of their underlying damaged visual and/or tactile modalities. Patients and healthy controls underwent a detection task, comprising visual stimuli depicting touches or without a tactile component. Touch and No-touch stimuli were presented in egocentric or allocentric perspectives. Seeing touches, regardless of the viewing perspective, differently affects visual perception depending on which sensory modality is damaged: In patients with a selective visual deficit, but without any tactile defect, the sight of touch improves the visual impairment; this effect is associated with a lesion to the supramarginal gyrus. In patients with a tactile deficit, but intact visual perception, the sight of touch disrupts visual processing, inducing a visual extinction-like phenomenon. This disruptive effect is associated with the damage of the postcentral gyrus. Hence, a damage to the somatosensory system can lead to a dysfunctional visual processing, and an intact somatosensory processing can aid visual perception.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Visual and spatial modulation of tactile extinction: behavioural and electrophysiological evidence.
- Author
-
Sambo CF, Vallar G, Fortis P, Ronchi R, Posteraro L, Forster B, and Maravita A
- Abstract
Crossing the hands over the midline reduces left tactile extinction to double simultaneous stimulation in right-brain-damaged patients, suggesting that spatial attentional biases toward the ipsilesional (right) side of space contribute to the patients' contralesional (left) deficit. We investigated (1) whether the position of the left hand, and its vision, affected processing speed of tactile stimuli, and (2) the electrophysiological underpinnings of the effect of hand position. (1) Four right-brain-damaged patients with spatial neglect and contralesional left tactile extinction or somatosensory deficits, and eight neurologically unimpaired participants, performed a speeded detection task on single taps delivered on their left index finger. In patients, placing the left hand in the right (heteronymous) hemi-space resulted in faster reaction times (RTs) to tactile stimuli, compared to placing that hand in the left (homonymous) hemi-space, particularly when the hand was visible. By contrast, in controls placing the left hand in the heteronymous hemi-space increased RTs. (2) Somatosensory event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded from one patient and two controls in response to the stimulation of the left hand, placed in the two spatial positions. In the patient, the somatosensory P70, N140, and N250 components were enhanced when the left hand was placed in the heteronymous hemi-space, whereas in controls these components were not modulated by hand position. The novel findings are that in patients placing the left hand in the right, ipsilesional hemi-space yields a temporal advantage in processing tactile stimuli, and this effect may rely on a modulation of stimulus processing taking place as early as in the primary somatosensory cortex, as indexed by evoked potentials. Furthermore, vision enhances tactile processing specifically when the left hand is placed in the hemi-space toward which the patients' attentional biases are pathologically directed, namely rightwards.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Talking to the senses: modulation of tactile extinction through hypnotic suggestion.
- Author
-
Maravita A, Cigada M, and Posteraro L
- Abstract
Following brain damage, typically of the right hemisphere, patients can show reduced awareness of sensory events occurring in the space contralateral to the brain damage. The present work shows that a hypnotic suggestion can temporarily reduce tactile extinction to double bilateral stimulation, i.e., a loss of contralesional stimuli when these are presented together with ipsilesional ones. Patient EB showed an improved detection of contralesional targets after a single 20-min hypnosis session, during which specific suggestions were delivered with the aim of increasing her insight into somatosensory perception on both sides of the body. Simple overt attention orienting toward the contralesional side, or a hypnotic induction procedure not accompanied by specifically aimed suggestions, were not effective in modulating extinction. The present result is the first systematic evidence that hypnosis can temporarily improve a neuropsychological condition, namely Extinction, and may open the way for the use of this technique as a fruitful rehabilitative tool for brain-damaged patients affected by neuropsychological deficits.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. The Modified Five-Point Test: normative data for a sample of Italian healthy adults aged 16-60.
- Author
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Cattelani R, Dal Sasso F, Corsini D, and Posteraro L
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aging physiology, Educational Status, Female, Frontal Lobe physiology, Humans, Italy, Male, Mental Processes physiology, Middle Aged, Problem Solving physiology, Psychomotor Performance physiology, Reference Values, Regression Analysis, Reproducibility of Results, Rotation, Sex Characteristics, Space Perception physiology, Visual Perception physiology, Young Adult, Neuropsychological Tests standards
- Abstract
The Five-Point Test is one of the various measures of figural fluency functions that have been developed as nonverbal analogues to word fluency tasks, and used in neuropsychological assessment to evaluate the ability to initiate and sustain mental productivity, and to self-monitor and regulate responding in the visual-spatial domain. The aim of the current study was to collect normative data for a version of the Five-Point Test (M-FPT) administered to a sample of Italian healthy adults aged 16-60 (n = 332). Performance on the M-FPT was scored by computing the cumulative number of unique designs (UDs) performed on a 3-min administration time. Two supplemental scores were also computed: (a) the cumulative strategies (CSs) consisting with the number of UDs incorporated into enumerative or rotational strategies; (b) the error index (ErrI), consisting with the percentage between the number of perseverative or rule-breaking errors and the number of designs overall. Multiple regression analyses revealed a significant effect of age and education, but not gender, for both UDs and CSs. Equivalent scores and cut-off scores were then determined for UDs and CSs. Descriptive statistical analyses and cut-off scores were reported for ErrI. The availability of normative data for the M-FPT will be valuable in clinical settings for assessing of executive dysfunctions on the visual-spatial subdomain of subjects with brain injury. However, in order to increase the usefulness of the test, the upper limits of the age range of the normative sample should be widened. Moreover, further analyses should be required for determining the inter-rater and test-retest reliability for M-FPT performances, and providing evidence of the sensitivity of this measure to brain disturbances generally and to frontal lobe dysfunction specifically.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Rehabilitating patients with left spatial neglect by prism exposure during a visuomotor activity.
- Author
-
Fortis P, Maravita A, Gallucci M, Ronchi R, Grassi E, Senna I, Olgiati E, Perucca L, Banco E, Posteraro L, Tesio L, and Vallar G
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Neurologic Examination, Neuropsychological Tests, Optics and Photonics, Perceptual Disorders pathology, Perceptual Disorders physiopathology, Reading, Severity of Illness Index, Adaptation, Physiological physiology, Functional Laterality physiology, Perceptual Disorders rehabilitation, Photic Stimulation, Psychomotor Performance physiology, Space Perception physiology
- Abstract
Objective: Adaptation to prisms displacing the visual scene rightward is a therapeutic tool for left unilateral spatial neglect (USN). We aimed at comparing the effects of the classic adaptation procedure (repeated pointing toward visual targets, control treatment, C), with those of a novel adaptation method, involving ecological visuomotor activities (experimental treatment, E)., Method: In 10 right-brain-damaged USN patients, each treatment was given for 1 week, with a crossover design, for a total of 20 sessions, twice per day. USN was assessed by cancellation, reading, and drawing tasks, and by a standardized scale. Neurological severity was assessed by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) stroke scale (Brott et al., 1989), disability by the Functional Independence Measure (FIM) scale., Results: The 2-week treatments (EC, CE) were equally effective, improving both USN, confirming previous reports (Frassinetti, Angeli, Meneghello, Avanzi, & Làdavas, 2002) and, importantly, disability. The improvement was independent of baseline performance, duration of disease, and neurological severity. Recovery took place after the first week, continued in the second week, and was stable at the follow-up of 3 months. The improvement of USN, measured by cancellation performance, and, in part, that of disability, measured through the FIM scale, were mediated by the size of the leftward aftereffects, suggesting a causal relationship between prism exposure and recovery. The E protocol was better tolerated., Conclusions: Daily life visuomotor activities, associated with prism exposure, are a useful tool for rehabilitating USN patients. This new treatment may widen the compliance with prism exposure treatments and their feasibility within home-based programs.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The spatial encoding of body parts in patients with neglect and neurologically unimpaired participants.
- Author
-
Sposito AV, Bolognini N, Vallar G, Posteraro L, and Maravita A
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Analysis of Variance, Female, Forearm physiopathology, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Male, Middle Aged, Neuropsychological Tests, Perceptual Disorders pathology, Physical Stimulation methods, Psychomotor Performance physiology, Functional Laterality, Human Body, Perceptual Disorders physiopathology, Space Perception physiology, Spatial Behavior physiology
- Abstract
Body parts are represented in the brain in a very specific fashion, as compared to other three-dimensional objects, with reference to their prototypic shape and multisensory coding. However, evidence is lacking about the spatial representation of body parts. To address this issue, in Experiment 1 we first compared the metric representation of body parts and of non-bodily objects in 14 right-brain-damaged patients with left unilateral spatial neglect (USN), and in 14 neurologically unimpaired control participants. Participants bisected, by manual pointing, a three-dimensional object, or their own left forearm. Patients showed the well-known ipsilesional rightward displacement of the subjective midpoint, in both forearm and solid bisection. Both USN patients and control participants were overall more accurate in the bisection of their own forearm, relative to the extracorporeal object. In four patients this advantage of the forearm was significant in a single-case analysis, while two patients showed the opposite dissociation, being more accurate with the solid object. In Experiment 2 neurologically unimpaired participants were more accurate in the bisection of a fake forearm, as well as of their own forearm, as compared to the extrapersonal object. Overall, the results indicate that the representation of the metric of the body is more reliable than that of extrapersonal objects, and also more resistant to the disruption of spatial representations brought about by USN, possibly due to the prototypical shape of body parts. Furthermore, the double dissociation found in USN patients suggests that the metrics of body parts and of extrapersonal objects are supported by independent spatial processes.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The Italian version of the Mayo-Portland Adaptability Inventory-4. A new measure of brain injury outcome.
- Author
-
Cattelani R, Corsini D, Posteraro L, Agosti M, and Saccavini M
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Brain Injuries rehabilitation, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Italy, Male, Middle Aged, Neuropsychological Tests, Predictive Value of Tests, Psychometrics, Recovery of Function, Reproducibility of Results, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Young Adult, Adaptation, Psychological, Brain Injuries physiopathology, Brain Injuries psychology, Health Status Indicators, Social Adjustment
- Abstract
Aim: The assessment of major obstacles to community integration which may result from an acquired brain injury (ABI) is needed for rational planning and effective management of ABI patients' social adjustment. Currently, such a generally acceptable measure is not available for the Italian population. This paper reports the translation process, the internal consistency, and the inter-rater reliability data for the Italian version of the Mayo-Portland Adaptability Inventory-4 (MPAI-4), a useful measure with highly developed and well documented psychometric properties. The MPAI-4 is specifically designed to assess socially relevant aspects of physical status and cognitive-behavioural competence following ABI. It is a 29-item inventory which is divided into three subdomains (Abilities, Adjustment, and Participation indices) covering a reasonably representative range, Methods: Twenty ABI patients with at least one-year discharge from the rehabilitation facilities were submitted to the Italian MPAI-4. They were independently rated by two different rehabilitation professionals and a family member/significant other serving as informant (SO). Internal consistency was assessed by calculating the Cronbach's alpha values. Inter-rater agreement for individual items was statistically examined by determining the interclass correlation coefficient (ICC)., Results: In addition to the 8% of perfectly correspondent sentences, a clear prevalence (75.5%) of minor semantic variations and formal variations with no semantic value at the sentence-to-sentence matching was found. Full-scale Cronbach's alpha was 0.951 and 0.947 for the two professionals (rater #1 and rater #2, respectively), and was 0.957 for the family member serving as informant (rater #3). Full-Scale ICC (2.1) between professionals and SOs was 0.804 (CI=95%; lower-upper bound=0.688-0.901)., Conclusions: The Italian MPAI-4 shares many psychometric features with the original English version, demonstrates both good internal consistency and good inter-rater reliability. The MPAI-4 confirms to be suitable for research applications in postacute settings as an efficient, broad and inclusive outcome measure for adult subjects with ABI.
- Published
- 2009
50. Repetita iuvant: object-centered neglect with non-verbal visual stimuli induced by repetition.
- Author
-
Savazzi S, Mancini F, Veronesi G, and Posteraro L
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Discrimination, Psychological, Female, Functional Laterality, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Orientation, Perceptual Disorders psychology, Photic Stimulation methods, Verbal Behavior, Form Perception, Neuropsychological Tests, Perceptual Disorders diagnosis, Practice, Psychological
- Abstract
Neglect can be ego-centered or object-centered depending on the reference frames for "left" and "right", of either the body or an object. It has been suggested that object-centered neglect is not a general phenomenon but is limited to words because only they have a true canonical representation. Here, we examined whether object-centered neglect could be observed for non-verbal material by creating, after repeated exposure, a canonical representation of a nonsense figure. Fourteen neglect patients repeatedly bisected a series of asymmetrical nonsense drawings containing two different shapes at their right and left end-points (canonical trials). In the critical trials, which were the last three in the series, the position of the two shapes was mirror-reversed. Afterwards, neglect patients were asked to draw the stimulus, which provided a further measure of whether a canonical representation of the object has been built by the patients. All the patients made rightward errors with the canonical stimuli. With mirror-reversed stimuli, the bisection errors were reversed to the contralesional side in one patient, returned to zero in one patient and significantly decreased in three patients. In addition, 10 patients reliably drew the canonical stimulus at the end of the series of trials, providing an indication that they built up a canonical representation of the stimulus. The present data provide evidence that object-centered neglect is a phenomenon that is not limited to words. The nature of a stimulus, verbal or non-verbal, is not critical for observing object-centered neglect. What is critical is the way in which material is represented by the patients.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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