Cortex
Volume 47, Issue 6 , Pages 696-705, June 2011

Constructional ability in two- versus three-dimensions: Relationship to spatial vision and locus of cerebrovascular lesion

  • Daniel X. Capruso

      Affiliations

    • New York City College of Technology, City University of New York, USA
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. 300 Jay Street, Namm-611, Brooklyn, NY 11201, USA.
  • ,
  • Kerry deS. Hamsher

      Affiliations

    • Department of Neurology, University of Wisconsin Medical School, USA

Received 17 September 2009; received in revised form 31 October 2009 and 31 January 2010; accepted 5 May 2010. published online 14 June 2010.

Action editor Sergio Della Sala

Abstract 

Introduction

Clinical evaluation and research on constructional ability have come to rely almost exclusively on two-dimensional tasks such as graphomotor copying or mosaic Block Design (BD). A return to the inclusion of a third dimension in constructional tests may increase the spatial demands of the task, and improve understanding of the relationship between visual perception and constructional ability in patients with cerebral disease.

Method

Subjects were patients (n=43) with focal or multifocal cerebrovascular lesions as determined by CT or MRI. Tests of temporal orientation, verbal intelligence, language, object vision and spatial vision were used to determine which factors were predictive of performance on two-dimensional BD and Three-Dimensional Block Construction (3-DBC) tasks.

Results

Stepwise linear regression indicated that spatial vision predicted BD performance, and was even more strongly predictive of 3-DBC. Other cognitive domains did not account for significant additional variance in performance of either BD or 3-DBC. Bilateral cerebral lesions produced more severe deficits on BD than did unilateral cerebral lesions. The presence of a posterior cerebral lesion was the significant factor in producing deficits in 3-DBC.

Conclusions

The spatial aspect of a constructional task is enhanced when the patient is required to assemble an object in all three dimensions of space. In the typical patient with cerebrovascular disease, constructional deficits typically occur in the context of a wider syndrome of deficits in spatial vision.

Keywords: Constructional apraxia, Spatial ability, Visual perception, Block Design, Cerebrovascular disease

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PII: S0010-9452(10)00147-4

doi:10.1016/j.cortex.2010.05.001

Cortex
Volume 47, Issue 6 , Pages 696-705, June 2011