Publication |
Sentence |
Publish Date |
Extraction Date |
Species |
Hind Drissi, Tristan Jurkiewicz, Audrey Vialatte, Aarlenne Zein Khan, Laure Pisell. Impact of macular scotoma and tubular vision on oculomotor behavior and performance in visuospatial comparison tasks. Journal of vision. vol 24. issue 9. 2024-09-03. PMID:39226068. |
two groups of 18 healthy participants with normal or corrected visual acuity performed visuospatial comparison tasks (computerized version of the elementary visuospatial perception [evsp] test) (pisella et al., 2013) with a gaze-contingent mask simulating either tubular vision (first group) or macular scotoma (second group). |
2024-09-03 |
2024-09-05 |
human |
Iman Beheshti, Samuel Booth, Ji Hyun K. Differences in brain aging between sexes in Parkinson's disease. NPJ Parkinson's disease. vol 10. issue 1. 2024-02-14. PMID:38355735. |
in the propensity score-matched pd-m group (pd-m*), brain-pad was found to be associated with a decline in general cognition, a worse degree of sleep behavior disorder, reduced visuospatial acuity, and caudate atrophy. |
2024-02-14 |
2024-02-17 |
human |
Henri Lenoir, Éric Siérof. [Visual perceptual disorders in Alzheimer's disease]. Geriatrie et psychologie neuropsychiatrie du vieillissement. vol 17. issue 3. 2020-01-31. PMID:31449049. |
overall, both low-level and high-level visual perception disorders seem quite common in alzheimer's disease, including, on a low-level, loss of visual field, decreased acuity and contrast sensitivity, and impaired color vision, and on a high-level, impaired color vision, motion perception, visuospatial deficits, object agnosia, prosopagnosia and impaired recognition of facial emotional expressions. |
2020-01-31 |
2023-08-13 |
Not clear |
G Kerkhoff, K Oppenländer, K Finke, P Bubla. [Therapy for cerebral visual perception disturbances]. Der Nervenarzt. vol 78. issue 4. 2007-08-08. PMID:17342457. |
prototypical symptoms are the omission of obstacles and hemianopic alexia in visual field disorders, blurred vision in reduced acuity and/or contrast sensitivity or impaired fusion, blinding in impaired light adaptation and dark vision in impaired dark adaptation, and impaired action and orientation in visuospatial deficits. |
2007-08-08 |
2023-08-12 |
Not clear |
H Dalens, M Solé, M Neyria. [Cerebral visual impairment in brain-damaged children - four case studies]. Journal francais d'ophtalmologie. vol 29. issue 1. 2007-04-04. PMID:16465120. |
visual dysfunction is characterized by fixation troubles, subnormal acuity (crowding), difficulty with perceiving visual fields, movements, depth, cognitive defects (agnosia of images, objects or faces, visuospatial disorders), ocular motility disorders (tonic gaze deviation, strabismus, nystagmus). |
2007-04-04 |
2023-08-12 |
Not clear |
W A Fletche. Ophthalmological aspects of Alzheimer's disease. Current opinion in ophthalmology. vol 5. issue 6. 1995-10-18. PMID:10172410. |
this visual variant of alzheimer's disease has been recognized only recently and typically appears in late middle age as progressive visuospatial and reading dysfunction, with normal visual acuity and fields. |
1995-10-18 |
2023-08-12 |
Not clear |