Department of Cognitive Neuroscience, Faculty of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of Maastricht, Maastricht, The Netherlands.
Restor Neurol Neurosci. 2010;28(4):485-97. doi: 10.3233/RNN-2010-0568.
Visuospatial processing refers to the spatial perception, recognition and analysis of visual input. Human functional brain imaging studies have consistently revealed the involvement of fronto-parietal brain areas during the execution of visuospatial tasks. Just as the execution of these tasks activates fronto-parietal regions in the healthy brain, lesions to those structures, e.g. after stroke or brain injury, cause specific spatial deficits. The most prominent of these is known as spatial neglect. There are several competing theories on the neural mechanisms underlying spatial neglect. Although each of these theories postulates different underlying physiological mechanisms, they all account in their own way for the fact that the prevalence of neglect is much higher following right hemisphere lesions. This makes it difficult to distinguish between the different models at a behavioural level. Until today, it was impossible to empirically address these matters and to provide direct and conclusive empirical evidence in favour of one of the competing theories of spatial neglect. This review article describes the neural correlates of intact visuospatial processing as revealed by non-invasive functional brain imaging studies. It subsequently focuses on the approach of using the non-invasive brain inference technique of transcranial magnetic brain stimulation (TMS) to transiently and reversibly disrupt neural activity in these visuospatial processing-related brain regions. Using this approach, we can now imitate specific spatial deficits and neglect-like symptoms in healthy volunteers. Mimicking and manipulating the spatial deficits following unilateral brain lesions, under controlled experimental conditions, may allow for the development of new therapeutic interventions for parietal stroke patients suffering from real spatial neglect. The perspective is to use non-invasive brain interference to guide and promote functional recovery on a brain-system level in stroke and neglect patients, based on knowledge directly derived from fundamental brain research in healthy volunteers.
视空间处理是指对视觉输入的空间感知、识别和分析。人类功能脑成像研究一致表明,在执行视空间任务时涉及额顶叶脑区。正如这些任务在健康大脑中激活额顶叶区域一样,这些结构的损伤,例如中风或脑损伤后,会导致特定的空间缺陷。其中最突出的是空间忽视。关于空间忽视的神经机制有几种相互竞争的理论。尽管这些理论中的每一种都假设了不同的潜在生理机制,但它们都以自己的方式解释了一个事实,即右半球损伤后忽视的发生率要高得多。这使得在行为层面上很难区分不同的模型。直到今天,人们还无法从经验上解决这些问题,也无法为空间忽视的竞争理论之一提供直接和确凿的经验证据。本文综述了非侵入性功能脑成像研究揭示的完整视空间处理的神经相关性。随后,本文重点介绍了使用非侵入性脑刺激技术经颅磁刺激(TMS)来暂时和可逆地破坏这些与视空间处理相关的脑区的神经活动的方法。通过这种方法,我们现在可以在健康志愿者中模拟特定的空间缺陷和类似忽视的症状。在受控实验条件下模拟和操纵单侧脑损伤后的空间缺陷,可以为患有真正空间忽视的顶叶中风患者开发新的治疗干预措施。该观点是基于从健康志愿者的基础脑研究中直接获得的知识,使用非侵入性脑干扰来指导和促进中风和忽视患者的大脑系统水平的功能恢复。