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Papers by Gilles Rode
Neurocase, Nov 1, 2000
Abstract Visual extinction following unilateral brain damage manifests as a deficit in detecting ... more Abstract Visual extinction following unilateral brain damage manifests as a deficit in detecting contralesional stimuli that occur briefly together with more ipsilesional events, despite intact detection of isolated stimuli on either side. Here we report a patient with left-...
Springer eBooks, Dec 15, 2007
Unilateral neglect is defined as the patient’s failure to report, respond to, or orient toward no... more Unilateral neglect is defined as the patient’s failure to report, respond to, or orient toward novel and/or meaningful stimuli presented to the side opposite to the brain lesion [1, 2, 3]. This syndrome is frequently consecutive to the damage of the right brain hemisphere. It often is in association with contralesional hemiplegia, hemianesthesia and hemianopia. Several types of motor deficits have been described in unilateral neglect, ranging from motor neglect or extinction to perturbations of intentional aspects of action.
M S-medecine Sciences, 1999
Annals of physical and rehabilitation medicine, Jun 1, 2017
Annals of physical and rehabilitation medicine, Jun 1, 2017
Frontiers in Psychology, Nov 20, 2017
Frontiers in Psychology, 2013
Annals of physical and rehabilitation medicine, Apr 1, 2015
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 2013
Revue Neurologique, Jul 1, 2017
Annals of physical and rehabilitation medicine, Apr 1, 2015
Annals of physical and rehabilitation medicine, Jun 1, 2017
Hemispatial neglect is a common disabling condition following brain damage to the right hemispher... more Hemispatial neglect is a common disabling condition following brain damage to the right hemisphere. Generally, it involves behavioral bias directed ipsilaterally to the damaged hemisphere and loss of spatial awareness for the contralesional side. In this syndrome, several clinical subtypes were identified. The objective of this article is to provide a nosological analysis of the recent data from the literature on the different subtypes of neglect (visual, auditory, somatosensory, motor, egocentric, allocentric and representational neglect), associated ipsilesional and contralesional productive manifestations and their anatomical lesion correlates. These different anatomical-clinical subtypes can be associated or dissociated. They reflect the heterogeneity of this unilateral neglect syndrome that cannot be approached or interpreted in a single manner. We propose that these subtypes result from different underlying deficits: exogenous attentional deficit (visual, auditory neglect); representational deficit (personal neglect, representational neglect, hyperschematia); shift of the egocentric reference frame (egocentric neglect); attentional deficit between objects and within objects (allocentric neglect), endogenous attentional deficit (representational neglect) and transsaccadic working memory or spatial remapping deficit (ipsilesional productive manifestations). Taking into account the different facets of the unilateral neglect syndrome should promote the development of more targeted cognitive rehabilitation protocols.
Behavioural Neurology, 1999
European Journal of Neuroscience, Sep 1, 2000
Annals of physical and rehabilitation medicine, Oct 1, 2013
... either quickly lift the index finger from a starting position or to reach to the centre of th... more ... either quickly lift the index finger from a starting position or to reach to the centre of the ... Oxford: Oxford University Press)], are specifically impaired for programming actions toward targets presented in peripheral vision ... Implications for the ventral/dorsal-stream theory are discussed ...
Neurocase, Nov 1, 2000
Abstract Visual extinction following unilateral brain damage manifests as a deficit in detecting ... more Abstract Visual extinction following unilateral brain damage manifests as a deficit in detecting contralesional stimuli that occur briefly together with more ipsilesional events, despite intact detection of isolated stimuli on either side. Here we report a patient with left-...
Springer eBooks, Dec 15, 2007
Unilateral neglect is defined as the patient’s failure to report, respond to, or orient toward no... more Unilateral neglect is defined as the patient’s failure to report, respond to, or orient toward novel and/or meaningful stimuli presented to the side opposite to the brain lesion [1, 2, 3]. This syndrome is frequently consecutive to the damage of the right brain hemisphere. It often is in association with contralesional hemiplegia, hemianesthesia and hemianopia. Several types of motor deficits have been described in unilateral neglect, ranging from motor neglect or extinction to perturbations of intentional aspects of action.
M S-medecine Sciences, 1999
Annals of physical and rehabilitation medicine, Jun 1, 2017
Annals of physical and rehabilitation medicine, Jun 1, 2017
Frontiers in Psychology, Nov 20, 2017
Frontiers in Psychology, 2013
Annals of physical and rehabilitation medicine, Apr 1, 2015
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 2013
Revue Neurologique, Jul 1, 2017
Annals of physical and rehabilitation medicine, Apr 1, 2015
Annals of physical and rehabilitation medicine, Jun 1, 2017
Hemispatial neglect is a common disabling condition following brain damage to the right hemispher... more Hemispatial neglect is a common disabling condition following brain damage to the right hemisphere. Generally, it involves behavioral bias directed ipsilaterally to the damaged hemisphere and loss of spatial awareness for the contralesional side. In this syndrome, several clinical subtypes were identified. The objective of this article is to provide a nosological analysis of the recent data from the literature on the different subtypes of neglect (visual, auditory, somatosensory, motor, egocentric, allocentric and representational neglect), associated ipsilesional and contralesional productive manifestations and their anatomical lesion correlates. These different anatomical-clinical subtypes can be associated or dissociated. They reflect the heterogeneity of this unilateral neglect syndrome that cannot be approached or interpreted in a single manner. We propose that these subtypes result from different underlying deficits: exogenous attentional deficit (visual, auditory neglect); representational deficit (personal neglect, representational neglect, hyperschematia); shift of the egocentric reference frame (egocentric neglect); attentional deficit between objects and within objects (allocentric neglect), endogenous attentional deficit (representational neglect) and transsaccadic working memory or spatial remapping deficit (ipsilesional productive manifestations). Taking into account the different facets of the unilateral neglect syndrome should promote the development of more targeted cognitive rehabilitation protocols.
Behavioural Neurology, 1999
European Journal of Neuroscience, Sep 1, 2000
Annals of physical and rehabilitation medicine, Oct 1, 2013
... either quickly lift the index finger from a starting position or to reach to the centre of th... more ... either quickly lift the index finger from a starting position or to reach to the centre of the ... Oxford: Oxford University Press)], are specifically impaired for programming actions toward targets presented in peripheral vision ... Implications for the ventral/dorsal-stream theory are discussed ...