Jewell George R, Salem Jill, Hartley Shannon, Vezey Elsie, Mark Victor W, Mennemeier Mark S
Department of Neurology and Rehabilitation Medicine, University of Cincinnati, USA.
Department of Psychology, University of Alabama at Birmingham, USA.
Adv Neurol Neurosci Res. 2022;3. Epub 2022 May 17.
Three studies that used experimental manipulations of stimulus context and correlational analyses were conducted to examine how contextual effects influence magnitude estimation and the crossover effect on line bisection. Previous work had shown that although orienting attention to one end of a line prior to bisection determines the direction in which crossover occurs, bias in magnitude estimation actually produces the crossover effect. The influence of contextual effects on magnitude estimation, however, was not examined in these previous models of crossover. Consequently, the purpose of the present investigation was to examine these effects. Subjects in the current studies were healthy controls and people who had right and left hemisphere injury due to stroke, both with and without spatial neglect. Study 1 examined the crossover effect for lines bisected with and without a stimulus context. Study 2 examined both stimulus order as well as response order context effects on magnitude estimation. Study 3 examined how much variance in magnitude estimation was accounted for by stimulus contextual effects and how stimulus context influenced the crossover effect. The results showed that contextual bias was ubiquitous but relatively small in the magnitude estimates of normal subjects. Contextual bias was exaggerated to a similar degree in subjects with right or left hemisphere injury due to stroke, but the amount of variance accounted by contextual bias was still quite small. A novel finding of study 2 was that contextual effects can be induced by previous responses to stimuli as well as by the magnitude of preceding stimuli in subjects with unilateral brain injury. This may be a contextual effect related to response perseveration. Finally, studies 1 and 3 indicated that contextual effects strengthened the crossover effect on line bisection, primarily on relatively short lines. Contextual effects, however, cannot fully account for the crossover effect, because crossover bisections were observed also in the absence of a stimulus context. It is concluded that the crossover effect is explained by biases in attentional orientation and magnitude estimation. Contextual effects represent one source of bias in magnitude estimation that influences the crossover effect by promoting contralateral errors on short line lengths (<2 cm).
开展了三项研究,采用刺激情境的实验操纵和相关分析,以检验情境效应如何影响大小估计以及对线平分的交叉效应。先前的研究表明,虽然在平分直线之前将注意力导向直线的一端决定了交叉发生的方向,但大小估计中的偏差实际上产生了交叉效应。然而,在这些先前的交叉模型中并未考察情境效应对大小估计的影响。因此,本研究的目的是检验这些效应。本研究中的受试者包括健康对照组以及因中风导致右半球和左半球损伤的人,他们既有空间忽视的情况,也有无空间忽视的情况。研究1检验了在有和没有刺激情境的情况下对直线进行平分时的交叉效应。研究2考察了刺激顺序以及反应顺序情境效应对大小估计的影响。研究3检验了刺激情境效应在大小估计中占多少方差,以及刺激情境如何影响交叉效应。结果表明,情境偏差普遍存在,但在正常受试者的大小估计中相对较小。在因中风导致右半球或左半球损伤的受试者中,情境偏差被夸大到了相似的程度,但情境偏差所解释的方差量仍然相当小。研究2的一个新发现是,在单侧脑损伤的受试者中,情境效应既可以由先前对刺激的反应诱导,也可以由先前刺激的大小诱导。这可能是一种与反应持续性相关的情境效应。最后,研究1和3表明,情境效应增强了对线平分的交叉效应,主要是在相对较短的直线上。然而,情境效应不能完全解释交叉效应,因为在没有刺激情境的情况下也观察到了交叉平分。研究得出结论,交叉效应是由注意力定向和大小估计中的偏差所解释的。情境效应是大小估计中偏差的一个来源,它通过在短直线长度(<2厘米)上促进对侧错误来影响交叉效应。