Lucia Spinazzola
University of Turin
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Featured researches published by Lucia Spinazzola.
Neuropsychologia | 2008
Lucia Spinazzola; Alessia Folegatti; C Marchetti; Anna Berti
In the present paper, we shall review clinical evidence and theoretical models related to anosognosia for sensorimotor impairments that may help in understanding the normal processing underlying conscious self-awareness. The dissociations between anosognosia for hemiplegia and anosognosia for hemianaesthesia are considered to give important clinical evidence supporting the hypothesis that awareness of sensory and motor deficits depends on the functioning of discrete self-monitoring processes. We shall also present clinical and anatomical data on four single case reports of patients selectively affected by anosognosia for hemianaesthesia. The differences in the anatomical localization of lesions causing anosognosia for hemiplegia and anosognosia for hemianaesthesia are taken as evidence that cerebral circuits subserving these monitoring processes are located in separate brain areas, which may be involved both in the execution of primary functions and the emergence of awareness related to the monitoring of the same functions. The implications of these findings for the structure of conscious processes shall be also discussed.
Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 1997
Nicolletta Beschin; Roberto Cubelli; S. Della Sala; Lucia Spinazzola
OBJECTIVES Egocentric coordinate systems centred on the trunk, head, and gaze have been investigated in a patient who displays severe extrapersonal neglect and in five control subjects. METHODS The subjects were tested with a blind tactile exploration task in five different experimental conditions in which the role of the three distinct frames of reference was individually controlled. RESULTS Only the trunk centred coordinates significantly influenced the performance of the patient, therefore proving of paramount importance in determining the boundaries of the neglected field. Similar results emerged from a single word reading task, in which the patient’s performance improved when the stimuli were presented to the right of his body’s midline. CONCLUSION These findings point to the importance of the body centred coordinate system in determining the area of extrapersonal spatial neglect.
Cortex | 2014
Lucia Spinazzola; Francesca Garbarini; Giulia Bellan; Alessandro Piedimonte; Carlotta Fossataro; Alessandro Livelli; Dalila Burin; Anna Berti
Brain-damaged patients affected by hemianaesthesia (i.e., the loss of tactile sensibility on the contralesional side of the body) may deny their deficits (i.e., anosognosia for tactile deficits) even reporting tactile experience when stimuli are delivered on the impaired side. So far, descriptive analysis on small samples of patients reported that the insular cortex, the internal/external capsule, the basal ganglia and the periventricular white matter would subserve anosognosia for hemianaesthesia. Here, we aimed at examining in depth the anatomo-functional nature of anosognosia for hemianaesthesia by means of a voxelwise statistical analysis. We compared two groups of left hemiplegic patients due to right brain damages differing only for the presence/absence of anosognosia for left hemianaesthesia. Our findings showed a lesional cluster confined mainly to the anterior part of the putamen. According to the current anatomical evidence on the neural basis of sensory expectancies, we suggested that anosognosia for hemianaesthesia might be explained as a failure to detect the mismatch between expected and actual tactile stimulation.
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience | 2013
M. Rabuffetti; Alessia Folegatti; Lucia Spinazzola; Raffaella Ricci; M. Ferrarin; Annamaria Berti; Marco Neppi-Modona
In the present study we explored the effect of prismatic adaptation (PA) applied to the upper right limb on the walking trajectory of a neglect patient with more severe neglect in far than in near space. The patient was asked to bisect a line fixed to the floor by walking across it before and after four sessions of PA distributed over a time frame of 67 days. Gait path was analyzed by means of an optoelectronic motion analysis system. The walking trajectory improved following PA and the result was maintained at follow-up, 15 months after treatment. The improvement was greater for the predicted bisection error (estimated on the basis of the trajectory extrapolated from the first walking step) than for the observed bisection error (measured at line bisection). These results show that PA may act on high level spatial representation of gait trajectory rather than on lower level sensory-motor gait components and suggest that PA may have a long-lasting rehabilitative effect on neglect patients showing a deviated walking trajectory.
Neuropsychological Rehabilitation | 2010
Anna Cantagallo; Lucia Spinazzola; M. Rabuffetti; Sergio Della Sala
Patients with anarchic hand (AH) syndrome exhibit involuntary but seemingly purposeful controlesional upper limb movements. Here we report on the case of a patient (AC) presenting with a right AH following a left medial frontal lesion. Previous literature indicated that endogenous movements, particularly in the presence of distractors, are impaired in AH, whereas exogenous movements are spared. In this study we examined exogenous and endogenous (or sequential) movements using a new experimental procedure. Our main aim was to investigate whether the ability to perform sequential movements improves under verbal command as anecdotally observed in patients with AH. Results showed that the performance of ACs right AH was impaired in sequential tasks and that this impairment was improved by verbal command. The observed reduction in errors in sequential tasks under external verbal command was coupled with a compensatory increase in response times.
Brain | 2003
Lucia Spinazzola; Roberto Cubelli; Sergio Della Sala
Neuropsychology (journal) | 2002
Anna Berti; Nicola Smania; M. Rabuffetti; M. Ferrarin; Lucia Spinazzola; Alessandra D'Amico; Emanuele Ongaro; Alan Allport
Cortex | 2007
Marco Neppi-Modona; M. Rabuffetti; Alessia Folegatti; Raffaella Ricci; Lucia Spinazzola; Francesca Schiavone; M. Ferrarin; Anna Berti
Archive | 2007
Anna Berti; Lucia Spinazzola; M. Rabuffetti
Neuropsychologia | 1996
Nicolletta Beschin; M. Cazzani; Roberto Cubelli; S. Della Sala; Lucia Spinazzola