cognitive vision loss

Pataasin ang iyong marka sa homework at exams ngayon gamit ang Quizwiz!

Simultanagnosia (ventral)

(L>R) -can't see arrays of letters, only one at a time

Simultanagnosia (ventral) deficit region

(L>R) occipitoparietal region

Simultanagnosia (dorsal) deficit region

(bilateral) occipitoparietal junction

face agnosia (Prosopagnosia) CVL tests errors

(due to pFus being involved) -form -motor-free -line

face agnosia (Prosopagnosia) CVL tests failed

- face

form agnosia deficit region

-LOC (dorsal) recognizes objects -V7 (dorsal) encodes objects -IT cortex (Macaques only) extends more anterior for macaques

visual form discrimination

-NOT test memory -tests discrimination bt complex configurations -basic forms encoded by euros in LOC

face agnosia (Prosopagnosia) deficit region

-VOT (ventral occipitotemporal) -(FFA) -also lesser so: LOC, pFus

Blindsight deficit region

-area V1 -unaffected dorsal path leaves visual guidance intact(superior colliculus neurons are intact and sensitive to motion)

Simultanagnosia (dorsal)

-can recognize pieces of sense but not a whole -"not being able to see properly" -"blind and clumsy" -cannot see 2 objects in 2 locations

associative agnosia

-can recognize, no perception of meaning

Optic Aphasia

-can't name visual objects (unless verbally described or touched) -however no semantic info loss - have some degree so does;t really affect life

apperceptive agnosia

-can't perceive/recognize/discriminate stimuli

Simultanagnosia (dorsal or ventral)

-cannot get scene as a whole -VF, color, acuity intact

comprehensive trail-making test (CTMT)

-combines high order visual cognitive planning + visual spatial perception -frontal lobe processing deficit if inc time

motion agnosia

-damage to V5/MT -strobe objects in motion -rare

Optic ataxia 3 things

-hard determining orientation of objects, problems grabbing objects -poor eye mvmts -fine orientation with lines or depth perception

topographic (place) agnosia

-impaired recognition of scenes and landmarks -in convo with secondary Alzheimer's disease or other degenerative white matter disease

Cognitive vision loss tests (CVL)

-judgement line orientation -visual form discrimination -facial recognition -ruff-light trail learning test (RULIT) -motor-free visual perception test (MVPT-3) -comprehensive trail-making test (CTMT)

topographic (place) agnosia failed tests

-learn -unlikely to show errors in other tests unless extends to medial/posterior occipitotemporal

Optic Aphasia failed tests

-line -this isn't directly assessed by any CVL tests

Semantic dementia

-loss of semantic memory (face, voice, places) -preserved visual spatial cognition, episodic learning and memory (day to day), non-verbal reasoning

semantic dementia failed tests

-make -limited errors in other 5 since semantics aren't involved

2 other non-cognitive vision losses

-motion agnosia -cortical color blindness (cerebral chromatopsia)

cortical color blindness

-V8 damage -unilateral, bad if bilateral

Simultanagnosia (dorsal or ventral) failed tests

LMoM -learn -motor free -make -likely to fail all 6

What path

ventral from occipital cortex to inferotemporal cortex -single obj recognition and discrimination

face agnosia (Prosopagnosia) 1 thing

-no face recognition without voice

Hemispatial neglect 3 things

-no info opposite of lesion -remember all scenes but the contralateral side doesn't make sense -pt denies problem

form agnosia

-no visual form discrimination/orientation of simple forms (real object is better, touching object helps) -VA grating, color, depth still fun

ruff-light trail learning test (RULIT)

-short term memory + spatial perception abilities -frontal/pre-frontal and posterior parietal cortex -tests R hemisphere

judgement line orientation

-shows dec ability to perceive spatial orientation -tests R hemisphere -lines encoded by V1, more specialized area of LO and LOC -spatial relationship bt lines by posterior parietal cortex

semantic dementia deficit regions

-temporal lobes (L>R), frontal lobes (L>R) -associated with stroke, closed head injury, post-surgery, viral encephalitis, Alzheimer's

Blindsight 2 things

-unilateral hemianopia, or bilateral blindness -can ID in blindfield when pressured

topographic (place) agnosia deficit region

-ventral medial occipitotemporal cortex (fusiform or lingual gyro) -bilateral lesions produce this, lesion in R hem alone produces small deficit -common R or bilateral PCA infarct , or injury to small vessel ischemic disease

Blindsight CVF tests they fail

BMLM -make -learn -motor free -all 6 will probably have errors

apperceptive agnosia 2 things

FApS -form agnosia -simultagnosia

form agnosia failed tests

FFMMLeL -form -motor-free -make -learn -line

Hemispatial neglect deficit region

IPP inferior and posterior parietal (R>L) -other frontal areas involved (FEF, IFL, MFL, thalamus) -often damage due to PCA stroke

Hemispatial neglect CVL tests failed (most to least likely)

LiLM -line -learn -make -likely to fail all 6

Optic ataxia tests they fail 3 things

OALM -learn -make -rarely errors in motor free tests unless lesion extends posterior and inferior parietal cortex

Most dangerous artery

PCA -stroke involves PCA (MCA contributes much less)

Where path

dorsal from occipital cortex to posterior parietal cortex - Where's dori, pp, many objects motor help

what does topographic (place) agnosia coincide with?

face agnosia bc of proximity

Optic Aphasia deficit region

left posterior hemisphere -occipital cortex, white matter extending to posterior corpus callous -deficit in left hem bc this is dom for language and speech

attention categorization: object based neglect

neglect R or L half of objects

attention categorization: space based neglect

neglect VF to R or L of fixation

form agnosia is opposite of what?

optic ataxia (accurate perception but poor motor action)

associative agnosia 5

place, face, hemi, phase, dementia -hemispatial neglect -face agnosia -topographical (place) agnosia -optic aphasia -semantic dementia

Optic ataxia deficit region

posterior parietal cortex + superior colliculus (PRR, LIP, AIP)

motor-free visual perception test (MVPT-3)

tests 5 visual perception abilities 1. spatial relationship (object to self) 2. visual discrimination (discriminate dom features of object) 3. figure-ground relationship (object from background) 4. visual closure (discriminate whole figure when only fragments are present) 5. visual memory (recon after only brief time) -V1 and LO tested for recognition -posterior parietal cortex for spatial relationships -anterior parietal lobe, frontal lobe, medial temporal lobe

facial recognition

tests brain disease to inferotemporal cortex (FFA, pFus) -FFA of VOT and pFus of LOC encode info, LO of LOC can also

what is most susceptible to brain trauma

white matter to trauma


Kaugnay na mga set ng pag-aaral

BTS - All Night (feat. Juice WRLD)

View Set

Omni-Channel for Lightning Experience

View Set

Research Quiz 1 -- Chapters 1, 13, 14

View Set

Network+ Quiz #1 (Chapter 1,2,3)

View Set

Careers, Salaries, and Lifetime Income

View Set