The Sprague effect is the phenomenon where homonymous hemianopia, caused by damage to the visual cortex, gets slightly better when the contralesional superior colliculus is destroyed.
[1][2] The effect is named for its discoverer, James Sprague, who observed this phenomenon in 1966 using a cat model.
[3] Several reasons have been thought of for this happening, including mutual inhibition between the two brain hemispheres.
[4] For similar reasons of inhibiting an inhibitory structure, damaging the substantia nigra, for instance by using ibotenic acid, can also cause the same improvement.
[5]