A comparison between the turbulent structures found in a zero pressure gradient boundary layer and a boundary layer subjected to a strong adverse pressure gradient is presented. The pressure gradient reverses the direction of the dominant turbulent diffusion, resulting in considerable turbulent transport towards the wall. Two-point space-time correlations and the invariants show that this reduces the anisotropy in the near wall region and indicate an important reflection of the turbulent motion from the wall back into the outer layer. This is verified by a quadrant analysis [Lu and Willmarth, J. Fluid Mech. 60, 481 (1973)] which demonstrates that the strong events near the wall are totally dominated by motions in the first and fourth quadrants. (C) 1995 American Institute of Physics.