Word and face recognition in posterior stroke – behavioural patterns and lesion lateralization

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Word and face recognition in posterior stroke – behavioural patterns and lesion lateralization. / Starrfelt, Randi; Robotham, Ro Julia; Kerry, Sheila; Rice, Grace; Lambon Ralph, Matt; Leff, Alex P.

In: Journal of Vision, Vol. 19, No. 10, 09.2019, p. 173.

Research output: Contribution to journalConference abstract in journalResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Starrfelt, R, Robotham, RJ, Kerry, S, Rice, G, Lambon Ralph, M & Leff, AP 2019, 'Word and face recognition in posterior stroke – behavioural patterns and lesion lateralization', Journal of Vision, vol. 19, no. 10, pp. 173. https://doi.org/10.1167/19.10.173

APA

Starrfelt, R., Robotham, R. J., Kerry, S., Rice, G., Lambon Ralph, M., & Leff, A. P. (2019). Word and face recognition in posterior stroke – behavioural patterns and lesion lateralization. Journal of Vision, 19(10), 173. https://doi.org/10.1167/19.10.173

Vancouver

Starrfelt R, Robotham RJ, Kerry S, Rice G, Lambon Ralph M, Leff AP. Word and face recognition in posterior stroke – behavioural patterns and lesion lateralization. Journal of Vision. 2019 Sep;19(10):173. https://doi.org/10.1167/19.10.173

Author

Starrfelt, Randi ; Robotham, Ro Julia ; Kerry, Sheila ; Rice, Grace ; Lambon Ralph, Matt ; Leff, Alex P. / Word and face recognition in posterior stroke – behavioural patterns and lesion lateralization. In: Journal of Vision. 2019 ; Vol. 19, No. 10. pp. 173.

Bibtex

@article{b3f63f5d51d44ec8880d60ebe74618dd,
title = "Word and face recognition in posterior stroke – behavioural patterns and lesion lateralization",
abstract = "Most neuropsychological evidence for category specific deficits in reading and face recognition comes from small-N studies of patients recruited on the basis of selective deficits. Taking a different approach, we recruited patients based on lesion location (Posterior Cerebral Artery-stroke) rather than symptomatology. 58 patients and 31 controls were included. We used a novel paradigm assessing recognition and memory for words, objects, and faces (the WOF-test), as well as typical tests of face recognition (CFMT) and reading aloud (RTs and word length effect). In a case series design, we analyse both group performance (left vs right hemisphere lesion), and single subject deficits, focusing on hemispheric differences in performance with faces and words. For the WOF-test and the CFMT, there were no significant differences in performance between lesion groups. Also, the proportion of patients in the left and right hemisphere groups with face recognition deficits and visual word processing deficits, respectively, did not differ. However, the severity of impairments in reading out loud was greater in the left hemisphere group. Four patients fulfilled the statistical criteria for a dissociation with impaired reading and preserved face recognition performance. These results suggest that face and word processing may be more bilaterally distributed than indicated by single case neuropsychological studies and functional imaging in neurotypicals. However, the observed dissociations indicate that word recognition may rely in part on (left) lateralized processes not involved in face recognition. This complements previous evidence that face recognition may be selectively impaired by right hemisphere stroke.",
author = "Randi Starrfelt and Robotham, {Ro Julia} and Sheila Kerry and Grace Rice and {Lambon Ralph}, Matt and Leff, {Alex P.}",
year = "2019",
month = sep,
doi = "10.1167/19.10.173",
language = "English",
volume = "19",
pages = "173",
journal = "Journal of Vision",
issn = "1534-7362",
publisher = "Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology",
number = "10",
note = "Vision Sciences Society VSS 2019 ; Conference date: 17-05-2019 Through 22-05-2019",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - Word and face recognition in posterior stroke – behavioural patterns and lesion lateralization

AU - Starrfelt, Randi

AU - Robotham, Ro Julia

AU - Kerry, Sheila

AU - Rice, Grace

AU - Lambon Ralph, Matt

AU - Leff, Alex P.

PY - 2019/9

Y1 - 2019/9

N2 - Most neuropsychological evidence for category specific deficits in reading and face recognition comes from small-N studies of patients recruited on the basis of selective deficits. Taking a different approach, we recruited patients based on lesion location (Posterior Cerebral Artery-stroke) rather than symptomatology. 58 patients and 31 controls were included. We used a novel paradigm assessing recognition and memory for words, objects, and faces (the WOF-test), as well as typical tests of face recognition (CFMT) and reading aloud (RTs and word length effect). In a case series design, we analyse both group performance (left vs right hemisphere lesion), and single subject deficits, focusing on hemispheric differences in performance with faces and words. For the WOF-test and the CFMT, there were no significant differences in performance between lesion groups. Also, the proportion of patients in the left and right hemisphere groups with face recognition deficits and visual word processing deficits, respectively, did not differ. However, the severity of impairments in reading out loud was greater in the left hemisphere group. Four patients fulfilled the statistical criteria for a dissociation with impaired reading and preserved face recognition performance. These results suggest that face and word processing may be more bilaterally distributed than indicated by single case neuropsychological studies and functional imaging in neurotypicals. However, the observed dissociations indicate that word recognition may rely in part on (left) lateralized processes not involved in face recognition. This complements previous evidence that face recognition may be selectively impaired by right hemisphere stroke.

AB - Most neuropsychological evidence for category specific deficits in reading and face recognition comes from small-N studies of patients recruited on the basis of selective deficits. Taking a different approach, we recruited patients based on lesion location (Posterior Cerebral Artery-stroke) rather than symptomatology. 58 patients and 31 controls were included. We used a novel paradigm assessing recognition and memory for words, objects, and faces (the WOF-test), as well as typical tests of face recognition (CFMT) and reading aloud (RTs and word length effect). In a case series design, we analyse both group performance (left vs right hemisphere lesion), and single subject deficits, focusing on hemispheric differences in performance with faces and words. For the WOF-test and the CFMT, there were no significant differences in performance between lesion groups. Also, the proportion of patients in the left and right hemisphere groups with face recognition deficits and visual word processing deficits, respectively, did not differ. However, the severity of impairments in reading out loud was greater in the left hemisphere group. Four patients fulfilled the statistical criteria for a dissociation with impaired reading and preserved face recognition performance. These results suggest that face and word processing may be more bilaterally distributed than indicated by single case neuropsychological studies and functional imaging in neurotypicals. However, the observed dissociations indicate that word recognition may rely in part on (left) lateralized processes not involved in face recognition. This complements previous evidence that face recognition may be selectively impaired by right hemisphere stroke.

U2 - 10.1167/19.10.173

DO - 10.1167/19.10.173

M3 - Conference abstract in journal

VL - 19

SP - 173

JO - Journal of Vision

JF - Journal of Vision

SN - 1534-7362

IS - 10

T2 - Vision Sciences Society VSS 2019

Y2 - 17 May 2019 through 22 May 2019

ER -

ID: 229809388