Abstract

It has been suggested that dopamine is an important neurotransmitter in the brain mechanisms which represent the upper visual field. This idea was tested with a vertical line bisection task in unilateral Parkinson’s disease. Stimuli of a range of lengths were presented on a large screen in three positions (left, centre and right) and at two viewing distances (0.6 and 1.5 m). The patients, who were compared with a group of normal age-matched controls, comprised 16 sufferers from predominantly unilateral disease, 8 with more severe left-sided symptoms (LPD) and 8 with more severe right-sided symptoms (RPD). The LPD group consistently set the bisecting cursor below the midpoint of the stimulus lines, and their bisection error became larger as the length of the line increased. In contrast, the controls set the cursor above the midpoint of the line, an error which also increased with line length. The settings of the RPD group were similar to those of the controls. The results suggest altitudinal neglect in left unilateral PD, and support the hypothesis of dopaminergic involvement in the coding of upper visual space, with the proviso that the perceptual component of this involves the right hemisphere in humans.

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