Abstract
Milner and Goodale's model of the primate cortical visual system has been justly influential in shaping recent empirical and theoretical work on the neural basis of conscious vision. In this commentary I examine the extent to which their model accounts for recent neuropsychological findings from patients with visual neglect and extinction, two profound disorders of visual consciousness that arise after unilateral brain damage. I begin by outlining two key claims from their model: first, that the characteristic loss of awareness for contralesional sensory inputs in neglect reflects disruption of ventral, object-recognition processes, rather than dorsal processes as has commonly been thought; and second, that extinction of the more contralesional of two concurrent stimulus events is primarily a disorder of orienting and action-related attention arising from damage to the dorsal, visuomotor stream. I then present recent findings that cast some doubt on these claims. Visual neglect arising from damage to the inferior parietal lobe can involve a significant visuomotor impairment, independent of any perceptual deficit. Moreover, visual extinction can be modulated by perceptual factors that are likely to call upon the ventral object-recognition stream. These findings suggest that neglect and extinction, two relatively common and striking disorders of consciousness, are not readily accommodated within Milner and Goodale's two visual streams model.