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6. Brain structures responsible for visual attention and eye movement - largely overlapping activity (Corbatta et al, 1998)

  • parieto-temporal brain structures
  • parieto-frontal brain structures
  • parieto-occipital brain structures
  • tempro-frontal brain structures

7. Components of Attention: Setting arousal level, detecting efficiency

  • Tonic/Vigilant Attention
  • Covert Attention
  • Selective Attention
  • Overt Attention

8. Neglect patients have a lesion of the...

  • Partietal/frontal lobe
  • Medial temporal lobe
  • Temporal/frontal lobe
  • Parietal/occipital lobe

9. Stimulus-driven ventral frontoparietal network

  • parietal-occipital junction, primary motor cortex
  • temporoparietal junctions, ventral frontal cortex
  • parieto-frontal brain structures
  • frontal eye field, intraparietal sulcus/superior parietal lobe

10. Attention depending on one's own intentional goal

  • Overt
  • Endogenous
  • Exogenous
  • Vigilant/Tonic

11. Extinction is the characteristic where...

  • there is an impaired performance for contralateral side when ipsilateral information is simultaneously presented
  • there is an impaired performance for ipsilateral side when contralateral information is simultaneously presented
  • there is an excess performance for the contralateral side when ipsilateral information is simultaneously presented
  • there is a defect in low-level visual processing and patient's can't see things on the contralateral side

12. When cue and target were presented in the .... RTs were .... when an attentional shift to the .... was required

  • Ipsilateral, Rapid, Contalateral
  • Ipsilesional, Delay, Contralesional
  • Conralateral, Rapid, Ipsilateral
  • Contralesional, Delayed, Ipsilesional

13. Unawareness/denial of illness

  • Anosagnosia
  • Aphasia
  • Dyspraxia
  • Apraxia

14. Three stages in Model Attention: components of visual-spatial attention

  • Select attention > Disengage Attention > Shift attention between locations
  • Engage attention > Shift attention between locations > Disengage attention
  • Engage attention > Disengage attention > Shift attention between locations
  • Plan attention > Engage attention > Execute attention

15. Spatial attention enhances activity of...

  • ERPs in fronto-parietal areas
  • ERPs in occipital areas
  • EEGs in occipital areas
  • ERPs in tempo-occipital areas

16. Selective attention enhances the activity of... (Moran and Desimone, 1985)

  • single cells
  • occipital lobe
  • neuronal deafferention
  • neurogenesis

17. Top-down dorsal frontoparietal network

  • parieto-frontal brain structures
  • frontal eye field, intraparietal sulcus/superior parietal lobe
  • temporoparietal junctions, ventral frontal cortex
  • parietal-occipital junction, primary motor cortex

18. Attention in the absence of body movements

  • Selective
  • Overt
  • Covert
  • Tonic/Vigilant

19. Neglect Syndrome is...

  • A defect in motor execution causing patient's problems in processing and executing movements on one side
  • A deficit of spatial attention causing problems in perceiving and responding to stimulation on one side
  • A defect in low-level visual processing where patient's have visual-field loss

20. Covert attention to peripheral location in anticipation of a stimulus = activity in... (Corbatta and Shulman, 2002)

  • Parietal and frontal cortex
  • Temporal and occipital cortex
  • cerebellum and pons
  • frontal and temporal cortex