This video was very helpful in understanding more about visual neglect and what it can tell us about the visual system. I know understand that visual neglect not only affects what you see but it also affects how they remember certain things. An example of this is that the women in the video was asked to draw a daisy from memory and could only complete one whole side of the drawing.
Interesting. The video shows that visual neglect is not only lost in visual field but also memory. They cannot see something move on the left side if their attention is directed to the right side. Here, the video shows visual neglect in drawing, but of course people have problems in normal life with this, for instance, shaving only one side of the face.
I found this video was very interesting. I was surprising to hear the woman say, I felt like I was drawing it all the way around, when she was referring to the daisy which was missing its left side.
This video helps show how visual neglect influences different aspects of a person's life. Visual neglect is the inability to attend to or respond to simuli in the contralesional visual field. I found it interesting that even the memory of the other side is affected when she is asked to draw a daisy from memory.
Having visual neglect would be strange because it seems that although they're missing their left visual field, they think that nothing is wrong. It makes me wonder if it would be possible to just close one eye and use the eye of the "good" visual field to see. I can see how having this condition could be dangerous because you'd be missing half of what's going on in the world.
I found this very interesting. It is one thing when you read it in a text book but its another to actually see a patient that has the disability. I thought it was interesting that she not only didnt see left sides of things but also didnt remember those left sides either. I wonder if it was because her expecations are that a daisy is circular. I also found it interesting that she saw what she had drawn wrong when it was pointed out to her.
This video was very intriguing because its crazy how someone can draw half of everything and not even realize it. I think I would have OCD and it would drive me bonkers to not be able to draw a full image. This video on visual neglect was very helpful to my understanding of this concept. Does it matter if you have one good eye versus a bad eye or it is all the brains doing that cause this deficiency? If so what side of the brain, the right or left?
This was very interesting to me. It was already surprising that a person could be "missing" half of their visual image, but it was even more shocking that visual neglect even affected their memory. She could only complete half of the drawing, and they even pointed it out to her. She kind of laughed when he told her that the whole left side was missing. I wonder if it can only happen with a brain injury or if a person can be born with it. I think the video said that it happened to her because of the stroke, I may have missed another part.
This video was very helpful in understanding more about visual neglect and what it can tell us about the visual system. I know understand that visual neglect not only affects what you see but it also affects how they remember certain things. An example of this is that the women in the video was asked to draw a daisy from memory and could only complete one whole side of the drawing.
Interesting. The video shows that visual neglect is not only lost in visual field but also memory. They cannot see something move on the left side if their attention is directed to the right side. Here, the video shows visual neglect in drawing, but of course people have problems in normal life with this, for instance, shaving only one side of the face.
I found this video was very interesting. I was surprising to hear the woman say, I felt like I was drawing it all the way around, when she was referring to the daisy which was missing its left side.
This video helps show how visual neglect influences different aspects of a person's life. Visual neglect is the inability to attend to or respond to simuli in the contralesional visual field. I found it interesting that even the memory of the other side is affected when she is asked to draw a daisy from memory.
Having visual neglect would be strange because it seems that although they're missing their left visual field, they think that nothing is wrong. It makes me wonder if it would be possible to just close one eye and use the eye of the "good" visual field to see. I can see how having this condition could be dangerous because you'd be missing half of what's going on in the world.
I found this very interesting. It is one thing when you read it in a text book but its another to actually see a patient that has the disability. I thought it was interesting that she not only didnt see left sides of things but also didnt remember those left sides either. I wonder if it was because her expecations are that a daisy is circular. I also found it interesting that she saw what she had drawn wrong when it was pointed out to her.
This video was very intriguing because its crazy how someone can draw half of everything and not even realize it. I think I would have OCD and it would drive me bonkers to not be able to draw a full image. This video on visual neglect was very helpful to my understanding of this concept. Does it matter if you have one good eye versus a bad eye or it is all the brains doing that cause this deficiency? If so what side of the brain, the right or left?
This was very interesting to me. It was already surprising that a person could be "missing" half of their visual image, but it was even more shocking that visual neglect even affected their memory. She could only complete half of the drawing, and they even pointed it out to her. She kind of laughed when he told her that the whole left side was missing. I wonder if it can only happen with a brain injury or if a person can be born with it. I think the video said that it happened to her because of the stroke, I may have missed another part.