Objective: To assess perceptual performances of patients with intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) compared with those of ischemic patients early after stroke and to analyze the psychometric properties of three perceptual tests used in the study.Design: Cross-sectional study.Setting: A rehabilitation unit at a teaching hospital.Patients: Twenty-two stroke patients with ICH and 22 demographically matched stroke patients with infarction.Main Outcome Measures: Loewenstein Occupational Therapy Cognitive Assessment (LOTCA), Rivermead Perceptual Assessment Battery (RPAB), and Motor-Free Visual Perception Test (MVPT).Results: Stroke patients with ICH had significantly more severe deficits on a task of thinking operations than did patients with infarction. A significant lateralized effect of stroke existed in the ICH group, with patients with right-hemisphere strokes scoring lower than patients with left-hemisphere strokes on the figure-ground discrimination subtest of the RPAB. A considerable overlap among the three instruments was found. Yet, the observed correlations between supposedly similar subtests from the tests proved to be moderate, indicating that to a certain extent these test measures tap different perceptual processes. Four factors were generated from a joint LOTCA-RPAB-MVPT factor analysis. They assessed different facets of perceptual functioning, including higher-level and lower-level perceptual skills, part/whole conceptual integration, and color perception. This factor pattern accounted for 75.5% of the variance.Conclusions: Higher-level perceptual functions tend to be relatively susceptible to ICH stroke pathology early in the course of the disease. This information has important clinical implications in the early treatment planning for the stroke patients with ICH, such that specific compensatory strategies for these deficiencies should be devised to facilitate a successful rehabilitation. Knowledge regarding the influences of specific deficits on the performance of daily activities may also be useful to the patients' family.