Research Topics
| Monika HarveySummaryAffiliation: University of Glasgow Country: UK Publications
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Detail Information
Publications
Immediate and delayed reaching in hemispatial neglectStephanie Rossit
Department of Psychology, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, Scotland, UK
Neuropsychologia 47:1563-72. 2009....
Non-lateralised deficits in anti-saccade performance in patients with hemispatial neglectStephen H Butler
Department of Psychology, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, UK
Neuropsychologia 47:2488-95. 2009..Damage to one or more components within this network may result in impaired voluntary control...
Comparison of the Milner and Bisiach Landmark Tasks: can neglect patients be classified consistently?Monika Harvey
Department of Psychology, University of Glasgow, UK
Cortex 40:659-65. 2004....
Impaired orientation processing in hemispatial neglectMonika Harvey
Department of Psychology, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, Scotland, UK
Neuroreport 18:457-60. 2007..Moreover, the magnitude of the distortion effect varied considerably between patients from as little as 2% objective underestimation to as much as 20%...
Perceptual and premotor neglect: is there an ideal task to categorise patients?Monika Harvey
Department of Psychology, University of Glasgow, UK
Cortex 40:323-8. 2004..Most importantly, he elucidated its relevance to visual neuropsychological and neuroscientific research...
Eye-movement patterns do not mediate size distortion effects in hemispatial neglect: looking without seeingMonika Harvey
Department of Psychology, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8QB, Scotland, UK
Neuropsychologia 41:1114-21. 2003..In addition, we did not find strong evidence for a link with hemianopia. We therefore propose that the effect reflects a computational/representational failure of processing for horizontal extent...
The effects of visuomotor feedback training on the recovery of hemispatial neglect symptoms: assessment of a 2-week and follow-up interventionMonika Harvey
Department of Psychology, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8QB, Scotland, UK
Neuropsychologia 41:886-93. 2003....
Is grasping impaired in hemispatial neglect?M Harvey
Department of Psychology, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK
Behav Neurol 13:17-28. 2001..No behavioural differences, though, could be found between right hemisphere lesioned patients with or without hemispatial neglect on either grasp parameters, path deviation or temporal kinematics...
Categorisation of 'perceptual' and 'premotor' neglect patients across different tasks: is there strong evidence for a dichotomy?Monika Harvey
Department of Psychology, University of Glasgow, UK
Neuropsychologia 40:1387-95. 2002....
Manual responses and saccades in chronic and recovered hemispatial neglect: a study using visual searchMonika Harvey
Department of Psychology, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8QB, UK
Neuropsychologia 40:705-17. 2002..In the current study, the measurement of saccades allowed the task to be fractionated, and thus, reveal the action of multiple mechanisms controlling saccades in search...
No neglect-specific deficits in reaching tasksStephanie Rossit
Department of Psychology, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G128QB, UK
Cereb Cortex 19:2616-24. 2009....
The neural basis of visuomotor deficits in hemispatial neglectStephanie Rossit
Department of Psychology, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, Scotland, UK
Neuropsychologia 47:2149-53. 2009..In addition, we suggest that the timing impairments which are not neglect-specific maybe be driven by frontal structures...
Effects of aging and exposure duration on perceptual biases in chimeric face processingStephen H Butler
Department of Psychology, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, Scotland, UK
Cortex 44:665-72. 2008..This differential perceptual activity can be viewed in terms of either reduced right hemispheric function, or increased bilateral function as a possible consequence of elderly adults experiencing the task as more effortful...
Looking away from faces: influence of high-level visual processes on saccade programmingStéphanie M Morand
Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging, Department of Psychology, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK
J Vis 10:16.1-10. 2010..e., responses that are beyond the control of the observer. Importantly, this involuntary processing cannot be accounted for by global low-level visual factors...
Non-lateralised deficits of drawing production in hemispatial neglectAlastair D Smith
Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Bristol, 12a Priory Road, Bristol BS8 1TU, and Department of Neurology and Care of the Elderly, Southern General Hospital, Glasgow, Scotland, UK
Brain Cogn 64:150-7. 2007..These findings demonstrate the complex relationship between neglect and even the simplest test for the syndrome...
Visuospatial neglect in actionMonika Harvey
School of Psychology, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8QB, Scotland, UK
Neuropsychologia 50:1018-28. 2012....
Hemispheric asymmetries in image-specific and abstractive priming of famous faces: evidence from reaction times and event-related brain potentialsTracy J Cooper
Department of Psychology, University of Glasgow, UK
Neuropsychologia 45:2910-21. 2007....
Perceptual biases in chimeric face processing: eye-movement patterns cannot explain it allStephen H Butler
Department of Psychology, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, Scotland, UK
Brain Res 1124:96-9. 2006..We suggest that the chimeric face bias is enhanced by eye movements...
Age-related differences in corrected and inhibited pointing movementsStephanie Rossit
Department of Psychology, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8QB, Scotland, UK
Exp Brain Res 185:1-10. 2008..For the first time, we demonstrate that aging is not accompanied by a decrease in the inhibition of motor control...
Does inversion abolish the left chimeric face processing advantage?Stephen H Butler
Department of Psychology, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, Scotland, UK
Neuroreport 16:1991-3. 2005..If this was indeed the case, flipping the chimeric faces should have resulted in a loss of the left face bias. This was not the case...
Characterizing exploration behavior in spatial neglect: omissions and repetitive searchBettina Olk
School of Humanities and Social Sciences, International University Bremen, Bremen, Germany
Brain Res 1118:106-15. 2006..The results further underline the importance of considering repetitive search behavior in addition to omissions in standard neglect assessments...
Effects of visible and invisible cueing on line bisection and Landmark performance in hemispatial neglectBettina Olk
Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Bristol, BS8 1TN, Bristol, UK
Neuropsychologia 40:282-90. 2002..It is hypothesised that the earlier reported effect may be linked to neglect severity rather than to perceptual type neglect...
