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Kenneth M. Heilman

Researcher at University of Florida

Publications -  712
Citations -  40917

Kenneth M. Heilman is an academic researcher from University of Florida. The author has contributed to research in topics: Neglect & Apraxia. The author has an hindex of 100, co-authored 706 publications receiving 39122 citations. Previous affiliations of Kenneth M. Heilman include Jerusalem Mental Health Center & McKnight Brain Institute.

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Spatial attentional bias in normal people: Object or viewer-centered

TL;DR: The results demonstrate that the perception of the midpoint progressively changes as a function of the body centered orientation of the lines, with subjects demonstrating a progressively greater distal bias as they approached the midsagittal plane or radial condition.
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Ipsilesional Attentional-Approach Neglect or Crossover Effect*

TL;DR: It is found that only left-sided cues induced a significant change (left-sided deviation) providing support for the attentional-approach (grasp) hypothesis and further support of this contralesional attentional grasp hypothesis comes from the observation that this patient also had ipsilesional extinction to simultaneous stimuli.
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Spelling dyslexia: a form of cross-cuing.

TL;DR: A patient with spelling dyslexia maintained the ability to write, spell, and pronounce spelled nonsense words and words that require knowledge of orthographic rules of language, and it is proposed that he uses a letter-naming strategy to circumvent the disconnection of visual areas from the area of visual word images.
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Length perception and production of normal subjects in proximal versus distal peripersonal space.

TL;DR: Results suggest that in peripersonal space the perception of length in normal subjects is most consistent with anisometric mental representation where the size of mental representations of length units decreases as a function of the distance from the subject's midsagittal plane.
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The oblique effect: The relationship between profiles of visuospatial preference, cognition, and brain connectomics in older adults

TL;DR: Older adults exhibit the oblique effect and it is associated with specific cognitive processes and regional brain networks that may facilitate future investigations of visuospatial preference in aging.