Detecting gradual visual changes in colour and brightness agnosia: a double dissociation

Publication date

2011-03-09

Authors

Nijboer, TanjaISNI 0000000390969706
Te Pas, S.F.ISNI 0000000392260792
van der Smagt, MaartenORCID 0000-0003-2772-6429ISNI 0000000390366905

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

Abstract

Two patients, one with colour agnosia and one with brightness agnosia, performed a task that required the detection of gradual temporal changes in colour and brightness. The results for these patients, who showed anaverage or an above-average performance on several tasks designed to test low-level colour and luminance (contrast) perception in the spatial domain, yielded a double dissociation; the brightness agnosic patient was within the normal range for the coloured stimuli, but much slower to detect brightness differences, whereas the colour agnosic patient was within the normal range for the achromatic stimuli, but much slower for the coloured stimuli. These results suggest that a modality-specific impairment in the detection of gradual temporal changes might be related to, if not underlie, the phenomenon of visual agnosia.

Keywords

Psychologie (PSYC), Taverne

Citation

Nijboer, T C W, te Pas, S F & Van der Smagt, M J 2011, 'Detecting gradual visual changes in colour and brightness agnosia: a double dissociation', NeuroReport, vol. 22, no. 4, pp. 175-180. https://doi.org/10.1097/WNR.0b013e328343f593