I am Reader in Cognitive Neurology and an Honorary Consultant Neurologist at Queen Square. My main clinical and academic interest is in cognitive rehabilitation, especially in the field of acquired language disorders. I am developing mechanistic accounts of how language disorders can be improved by different types of therapy, both pharmacological and behavioural, using functional and structural brain imaging. I have developed two web-based rehabilitation tools that can be used to by therapists and patients with hemianopia, and am working on four other electronic therapy projects sponsored by the MRC, NIHR and The Stroke Association. I think that web-based applications are a good way to make scientifically proven behavioural therapies available to suitable patients and their therapists.
Noninvasive neurostimulation methods such as transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) can e... more Noninvasive neurostimulation methods such as transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) can elicit long-lasting, polarity-dependent changes in neocortical excitability. In a previous concurrent tDCS-fMRI study of overt picture naming, we reported significant behavioural and regionally specific neural facilitation effects in left inferior frontal cortex (IFC) with anodal tDCS applied to left frontal cortex (Holland et al., 2011). Although distributed connectivity effects of anodal tDCS have been modelled at rest, the mechanism by which 'on-line' tDCS may modulate neuronal connectivity during a task-state remains unclear. Here, we used Dynamic Causal Modelling (DCM) to determine: (i) how neural connectivity within the frontal speech network is modulated during anodal tDCS; and, (ii) how individual variability in behavioural response to anodal tDCS relates to changes in effective connectivity strength. Results showed that compared to sham, anodal tDCS elicited stronger feedback from inferior frontal sulcus (IFS) to ventral premotor (VPM) accompanied by weaker self-connections within VPM, consistent with processes of neuronal adaptation. During anodal tDCS individual variability in the feedforward connection strength from IFS to VPM positively correlated with the degree of facilitation in naming behaviour. These results provide an essential step towards understanding the mechanism of 'online' tDCS paired with a cognitive task. They also identify left IFS as a 'top-down' hub and driver for speech change.
Brain imaging studies of functional outcomes after white matter damage have quantified the severi... more Brain imaging studies of functional outcomes after white matter damage have quantified the severity of white matter damage in different ways. Here we compared how the outcome of such studies depends on two different types of measurements: the proportion of the target tract that has been destroyed ('lesion load') and tract disconnection. We demonstrate that conclusions from analyses based on two examples of these measures diverge and that conclusions based solely on lesion load may be misleading. First, we reproduce a recent lesion-load-only analysis which suggests that damage to the arcuate fasciculus, and not to the uncinate fasciculus, is significantly associated with deficits in fluency and naming skills. Next, we repeat the analysis after replacing the measures of lesion load with measures of tract disconnection for both tracts, and observe significant associations between both tracts and both language skills: i.e. the change increases the apparent relevance of the uncin...
... The diagnosis is confirmed by the presence of elevated serum manganese and urine levels ... T... more ... The diagnosis is confirmed by the presence of elevated serum manganese and urine levels ... There may be elevated levels of carboxyhaemoglobin and MRI shows diffuse symmetrical high intensity ... local heat production and is generally mild, although damage to retinal and optic ...
ABSTRACT See book review in Aphasiology 28(6); 766-769: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02687038.2014.8... more ABSTRACT See book review in Aphasiology 28(6); 766-769: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02687038.2014.894959 This book is a comprehensive review of the main acquired disorders of reading: hemianopic, pure and central alexia. The authors review the diagnostic criteria for each of the different types of disorder, and the efficacy of the therapeutic studies that have attempted to remediate them. The different theoretical models of adult reading, which largely rest on how the reading system responds to injury, are also discussed and evaluated. Focal brain injury caused by stroke and brain tumors are discussed in depth as are the effects of dementia on reading. This book starts with a chapter on normal reading, followed by chapters on hemianopic alexia, pure alexia and central alexia, each structured in the same way, with: a description of the condition; a historical review of cases to date; psychophysics; consideration of the causative lesions; evidence from functional imaging studies on patients and, most importantly, a review of the evidence base for treating each condition. Finally, there is a chapter on how patient data has informed how we think about reading. Alexia: Diagnosis, Treatment and Theory is aimed at neuropsychologists (both experimental and clinical), neurologists, speech therapists and others who deal with patients whose reading has been affected by an acquired brain injury, as well as interested students studying language disorders. Also available as E-book. http://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-1-4471-5529-4
Thomas Laycock has been credited as being the first to apply the concept of reflex action to the ... more Thomas Laycock has been credited as being the first to apply the concept of reflex action to the brain, and to apply the theory of evolution of the development of the nervous centres in the animal kingdom to man. Even though Laycock was writing about these ideas fifteen years before ...
This article comprises a historical review of the literature pertaining to the representation of ... more This article comprises a historical review of the literature pertaining to the representation of the visual field in human primary visual cortex. A brief survey of the anatomy of the visual system is followed by a critical evaluation of the key studies that have informed both the issue of the disproportionate representation of central vision within primary visual cortex, and the anatomical basis underlying the phenomena of macular sparing and macular splitting hemianopia.
Doctors in particular and the public in general have always had a hatful of terms to hand when wi... more Doctors in particular and the public in general have always had a hatful of terms to hand when wishing to describe the mad. The former attempting to consolidate nosologies on the shifting sands of a seemingly endless variegation of psychopathology; the latter - like the ...
Noninvasive neurostimulation methods such as transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) can e... more Noninvasive neurostimulation methods such as transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) can elicit long-lasting, polarity-dependent changes in neocortical excitability. In a previous concurrent tDCS-fMRI study of overt picture naming, we reported significant behavioural and regionally specific neural facilitation effects in left inferior frontal cortex (IFC) with anodal tDCS applied to left frontal cortex (Holland et al., 2011). Although distributed connectivity effects of anodal tDCS have been modelled at rest, the mechanism by which 'on-line' tDCS may modulate neuronal connectivity during a task-state remains unclear. Here, we used Dynamic Causal Modelling (DCM) to determine: (i) how neural connectivity within the frontal speech network is modulated during anodal tDCS; and, (ii) how individual variability in behavioural response to anodal tDCS relates to changes in effective connectivity strength. Results showed that compared to sham, anodal tDCS elicited stronger feedback from inferior frontal sulcus (IFS) to ventral premotor (VPM) accompanied by weaker self-connections within VPM, consistent with processes of neuronal adaptation. During anodal tDCS individual variability in the feedforward connection strength from IFS to VPM positively correlated with the degree of facilitation in naming behaviour. These results provide an essential step towards understanding the mechanism of 'online' tDCS paired with a cognitive task. They also identify left IFS as a 'top-down' hub and driver for speech change.
Brain imaging studies of functional outcomes after white matter damage have quantified the severi... more Brain imaging studies of functional outcomes after white matter damage have quantified the severity of white matter damage in different ways. Here we compared how the outcome of such studies depends on two different types of measurements: the proportion of the target tract that has been destroyed ('lesion load') and tract disconnection. We demonstrate that conclusions from analyses based on two examples of these measures diverge and that conclusions based solely on lesion load may be misleading. First, we reproduce a recent lesion-load-only analysis which suggests that damage to the arcuate fasciculus, and not to the uncinate fasciculus, is significantly associated with deficits in fluency and naming skills. Next, we repeat the analysis after replacing the measures of lesion load with measures of tract disconnection for both tracts, and observe significant associations between both tracts and both language skills: i.e. the change increases the apparent relevance of the uncin...
... The diagnosis is confirmed by the presence of elevated serum manganese and urine levels ... T... more ... The diagnosis is confirmed by the presence of elevated serum manganese and urine levels ... There may be elevated levels of carboxyhaemoglobin and MRI shows diffuse symmetrical high intensity ... local heat production and is generally mild, although damage to retinal and optic ...
ABSTRACT See book review in Aphasiology 28(6); 766-769: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02687038.2014.8... more ABSTRACT See book review in Aphasiology 28(6); 766-769: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02687038.2014.894959 This book is a comprehensive review of the main acquired disorders of reading: hemianopic, pure and central alexia. The authors review the diagnostic criteria for each of the different types of disorder, and the efficacy of the therapeutic studies that have attempted to remediate them. The different theoretical models of adult reading, which largely rest on how the reading system responds to injury, are also discussed and evaluated. Focal brain injury caused by stroke and brain tumors are discussed in depth as are the effects of dementia on reading. This book starts with a chapter on normal reading, followed by chapters on hemianopic alexia, pure alexia and central alexia, each structured in the same way, with: a description of the condition; a historical review of cases to date; psychophysics; consideration of the causative lesions; evidence from functional imaging studies on patients and, most importantly, a review of the evidence base for treating each condition. Finally, there is a chapter on how patient data has informed how we think about reading. Alexia: Diagnosis, Treatment and Theory is aimed at neuropsychologists (both experimental and clinical), neurologists, speech therapists and others who deal with patients whose reading has been affected by an acquired brain injury, as well as interested students studying language disorders. Also available as E-book. http://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-1-4471-5529-4
Thomas Laycock has been credited as being the first to apply the concept of reflex action to the ... more Thomas Laycock has been credited as being the first to apply the concept of reflex action to the brain, and to apply the theory of evolution of the development of the nervous centres in the animal kingdom to man. Even though Laycock was writing about these ideas fifteen years before ...
This article comprises a historical review of the literature pertaining to the representation of ... more This article comprises a historical review of the literature pertaining to the representation of the visual field in human primary visual cortex. A brief survey of the anatomy of the visual system is followed by a critical evaluation of the key studies that have informed both the issue of the disproportionate representation of central vision within primary visual cortex, and the anatomical basis underlying the phenomena of macular sparing and macular splitting hemianopia.
Doctors in particular and the public in general have always had a hatful of terms to hand when wi... more Doctors in particular and the public in general have always had a hatful of terms to hand when wishing to describe the mad. The former attempting to consolidate nosologies on the shifting sands of a seemingly endless variegation of psychopathology; the latter - like the ...
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