WEBVTT 00:00:05.049 --> 00:00:09.600 << opening instrumental music >> 00:00:09.599 --> 00:00:14.250 [Narrator] Unlike Graham, Peggy Palmer has normal vision. 00:00:14.250 --> 00:00:17.500 She should be able to copy this star easily. 00:00:17.500 --> 00:00:19.899 [Peggy] "I'll never get this star I'm hopeless at this." 00:00:19.899 --> 00:00:22.989 [Narrator] But something odd is happening. 00:00:22.989 --> 00:00:27.549 One whole side of the star is missing. 00:00:27.550 --> 00:00:31.440 Peggy has a condition called visual neglect. 00:00:31.440 --> 00:00:33.909 Although her eyesight is fine, 00:00:33.909 --> 00:00:39.049 half of her visual world no longer seems to matter. 00:00:39.049 --> 00:00:44.219 Ten years ago, Peggy suffered a stroke in the parietal lobes of her brain. 00:00:44.219 --> 00:00:48.319 [V.S. Ramachandran] "The parietal lobes are concerned mainly 00:00:48.319 --> 00:00:50.599 with creating a three-dimensional representation 00:00:50.600 --> 00:00:55.419 of the spatial layout of the world allowing a person to walk around 00:00:55.419 --> 00:01:00.709 to navigate, to avoid bumping into things. 00:01:00.709 --> 00:01:02.660 When the right side is damaged 00:01:02.660 --> 00:01:07.740 the patient is unable to deal with the left side of the world. 00:01:07.739 --> 00:01:11.640 [Narrator] This condition has fascinated neurologists for more than a century 00:01:11.640 --> 00:01:17.278 because it reveals not only how the brain shapes the way we perceive space in the present 00:01:17.278 --> 00:01:22.300 it even determines the spatial look our memories. 00:01:22.300 --> 00:01:27.608 This became apparent when Peggy was asked to draw a daisy from memory. 00:01:28.479 --> 00:01:32.619 "Alright, a daisy it shall be" 00:01:32.619 --> 00:01:39.118 [Narrator] For neuropsychologist Peter Halligan Peggy's drawings reveal exactly what's gone wrong. 00:01:39.118 --> 00:01:42.108 [Peter] It is like a radar system whereby 00:01:42.108 --> 00:01:47.179 the actual radar system on the left hand side is no longer working well. 00:01:48.519 --> 00:01:50.739 If someone comes into my left hand side now 00:01:50.739 --> 00:01:54.619 or I hear a sound my eyes will immediately move to left hand side 00:01:54.619 --> 00:01:58.219 that makes me, for evolutionary purposes very aware of my environment 00:01:58.218 --> 00:02:01.339 because I wasn't aware of those things I would have accidents 00:02:01.340 --> 00:02:06.030 I'd get hurt or I might get eaten by wild animals and whatever. 00:02:06.030 --> 00:02:09.169 Now, in Peggy's case she will not attend to those things 00:02:09.169 --> 00:02:13.400 that we would normally be aware of. 00:02:13.400 --> 00:02:16.160 [Narrator] Peggy thinks she's drawn her daisies right 00:02:16.160 --> 00:02:19.619 until it's pointed out to her. 00:02:19.619 --> 00:02:20.990 [Peter] "You've noticed that, have you?" 00:02:20.990 --> 00:02:22.790 [Peggy ]"Oh, dear." 00:02:22.790 --> 00:02:26.310 [Peter] "So what Peggy's drawn for us is several nice daisies 00:02:26.310 --> 00:02:30.110 with the left side missing same this one and this one 00:02:30.110 --> 00:02:33.359 look at this one this is a very good example" 00:02:33.359 --> 00:02:36.019 [Peggy] "I've done it on all of them" 00:02:37.430 --> 00:02:41.960 [V.S. Ramachandran] Which means she's not only neglecting events in the world but when she 00:02:41.960 --> 00:02:47.150 conjures up a mental image she's ignoring the left side of that mental image. 00:02:47.169 --> 00:02:49.349 [Peggy] "I thought I was going all the way around you see" 00:02:49.349 --> 00:02:53.289 [MD] "And the shows you that this is not simply a sensory problem but 00:02:53.289 --> 00:02:56.439 a problem of consciousness" 00:02:56.439 --> 00:03:02.210 [Peggy] "It's cause I was so concentrated on that side takes everything away, you see 00:03:02.210 --> 00:03:07.269 It is attention really is taking this taken away this 00:03:07.269 --> 00:03:13.209 there must be two attentions somewhere in your body one side's taking another one away. 00:03:13.209 --> 00:03:15.939 I can't make it out at all, very odd" 00:03:15.939 --> 00:03:18.277 << closing instrumental music >>