Network Localization of Awareness in Visual and Motor Anosognosia

Author:

Kletenik Isaiah1234ORCID,Gaudet Kyla3,Prasad Sashank24ORCID,Cohen Alexander L.345ORCID,Fox Michael D.12346ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Cognitive and Behavioral Neurology Brigham and Women's Hospital Boston MA

2. Department of Neurology Brigham and Women's Hospital Boston MA

3. Center for Brain Circuit Therapeutics Brigham and Women's Hospital Boston MA

4. Harvard Medical School Boston MA

5. Department of Neurology; Computational Radiology Laboratory, Department of Radiology Boston Children's Hospital Boston MA

6. Departments of Radiology and Psychiatry Brigham and Women's Hospital Boston MA

Abstract

ObjectiveUnawareness of a deficit, anosognosia, can occur for visual or motor deficits and lends insight into awareness itself; however, lesions associated with anosognosia occur in many different brain locations.MethodsWe analyzed 267 lesion locations associated with either vision loss (with and without awareness) or weakness (with and without awareness). The network of brain regions connected to each lesion location was computed using resting‐state functional connectivity from 1,000 healthy subjects. Both domain specific and cross‐modal associations with awareness were identified.ResultsThe domain‐specific network for visual anosognosia demonstrated connectivity to visual association cortex and posterior cingulate while motor anosognosia was defined by insula, supplementary motor area, and anterior cingulate connectivity. A cross‐modal anosognosia network was defined by connectivity to the hippocampus and precuneus (false discovery rate p < 0.05).InterpretationOur results identify distinct network connections associated with visual and motor anosognosia and a shared, cross‐modal network for awareness of deficits centered on memory‐related brain structures. ANN NEUROL 2023;94:434–441

Funder

Child Neurology Foundation

Nancy Lurie Marks Family Foundation

National Institute of Mental Health

National Institute on Aging

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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1. A neural circuit for spatial orientation derived from brain lesions;Cerebral Cortex;2023-12-13

2. Convergence of Visual and Motor Awareness in Human Parietal Cortex;Annals of Neurology;2023-10-11

3. Multiple sclerosis lesions that impair memory map to a connected memory circuit;Journal of Neurology;2023-08-02

4. Higher Cortical Visual Disorders;Reference Module in Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Psychology;2023

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