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Temporal constraints of perceiving, generating, and integrating information: Clinical indications.

Autoren/Mitwirkende
Titel
Temporal constraints of perceiving, generating, and integrating information: Clinical indications.
Zusammenfassung
Neuropsychological research on temporal constraints of perception and motor performance can add important information to research on human behavior. Without considering temporal mechanisms of perceiving, generating, and updating information, brain mechanisms can never be fully understood. In this study temporal aspects of performance in psychophysical experiments on three different temporal levels (around 30 ms, 300 ms, and 3000 ms) were investigated in patients with acquired brain lesions and a control group without neurological deficits. The patients had acquired focal brain lesions in: anterior (pre-central) regions of the left hemisphere (with non-fluent aphasia), posterior (post-central) regions of the left hemisphere (with fluent aphasia), the left hemipshere in predominantly subcortical regions (without aphasia), or anterior (pre-central) or posterior (post-central) regions of the right hemipshere. Perception of temporal order (20 to 60 ms) was impaired in patients with left-hemispheric post-central lesions; repetitive voluntary action (300 to 500 ms) was affected mostly in patients with left hemi-spheric lesions, both pre-central and post-central; and a deficit in integrating (2000 ms to 3000 ms) information was most pronounced in patients with left and right pre-central lesions. These findings provide insight into the associations between different levels of temporal organisation and circumscribed regions of the neocortex.
Publikation
Restorative neurology and neuroscience
Datum
1999
Band
14
Ausgabe
2-3
Seiten
167-182
Zeitschriften-Abkürzung
Restor Neurol Neurosci
ISSN
1878-3627 0922-6028
Sprache
eng
Zitierung
Von Steinbüchel, N., Wittmann, M., & Szelag, E. (1999). Temporal constraints of perceiving, generating, and integrating information: Clinical indications. Restorative Neurology and Neuroscience, 14(2–3), 167–182.
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