10 BÜCHER, DIE MIT «AGRAPHIA» IM ZUSAMMENHANG STEHEN
Entdecke den Gebrauch von
agraphia in der folgenden bibliographischen Auswahl. Bücher, die mit
agraphia im Zusammenhang stehen und kurze Auszüge derselben, um seinen Gebrauch in der Literatur kontextbezogen darzustellen.
1
Color Atlas of Neurology
Agraphia is the acquired inability to write. Agraphia may be isolated (due to a
lesion located in area 6. the superior parietal lobule. or elsewhere) or
accompanied by other disturbances: aphasic agraphia is fluent or nonfluent.
depending on the ...
2
The MIT Encyclopedia of Communication Disorders
Damage to specific components of the spelling process may result in identifiable
agraphia syndromes with relatively predictable lesion sites (Roeltgen, 1993,
1994; Rapcsak and Beeson, 2000, 2002). Central agraphia syndromes reflect ...
Raymond D. Kent, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2004
3
Clinical Neuropsychology
For a century after Benedikt (1865) applied the term agraphia to disorders of
writing, studies of agraphia focused on the relationship of agraphia to aphasia.
Ogle (1867) found that although aphasia and agraphia usually occur together,
they ...
Kenneth M. Heilman James E. Rooks Jr. Distinguished Professor of Neurology and Clinical and Health Psychology, Chair of the Department of Neurology Residency Program University of Florida College of Medicine Edward Valenstein William L. and Janice M. Neely Professors of Neurology, Gainesville, 2003
4
Aphasia, Alexia, and
Agraphia
5
Neuroscience for the Study of Communicative Disorders
A fourth neurolinguistic alexia syndrome, letter- by-letter reading, is synonymous
with the syndrome of pure alexia without agraphia (see section on alexia without
agraphia), in which patients have recovered enough reading ability to read ...
Subhash Chandra Bhatnagar, 2002
6
The Influence of Lexical and Sublexical Factors on Acquired ...
Coltheart, 1985) and phonological agraphia is often accompanied by
phonological alexia (Coltheart et al., 1980). There are reports in the literature of
surface and phonological agraphia occurring without an accompanied reading
impairment ...
7
Acquired Speech and Language Disorders
Alexia with agraphia, also called 'parietal alexia' or 'parietal temporal alexia', was
first described by Dejerine (1891). His case manifested an almost total inability to
read, a limited writing ability, a mild aphasia and a calculation disturbance ...
8
The Concise Corsini Encyclopedia of Psychology and ...
They may, however, be impaired selectively, yielding to different agraphia types.
Clinical Examination Examination for agraphia includes spontaneous writing,
writing to dictation (Figure 1), and written naming. If the dominant arm is
paralyzed, ...
W. Edward Craighead, Charles B. Nemeroff, 2004
9
Aphasia: A Clinical Perspective
literature) are recognized: central agraphia and peripheral agraphia (Ellis, 1988;
Ellis, Young, and Flude, 1987), paralleling the distinction between central alexia
and peripheral alexia (Shallice and Warrington, 1980). Anatomically based and ...
David Frank Benson, Alfredo Ardila, 1996
10
INS Dictionary of Neuropsychology
7 Agraphia writing disorders meaning is generally preserved because of the
presence of substantive words with high information content. Agrammatism is
also called telegraphic speech (or telegramma- tism) because of the absence of ...
David W. Loring, Kimford J. Meador, 1999
10 NACHRICHTEN, IN DENEN DER BEGRIFF «AGRAPHIA» VORKOMMT
Erfahre, worüber man in den einheimischen und internationalen Medien spricht und wie der Begriff
agraphia im Kontext der folgenden Nachrichten gebraucht wird.
Visual signs and symptoms in patients with the visual variant of …
Lesions of the ventral system (« what » pathway) produce alexia without agraphia, visual object agnosia, and prosopagnosia (inability to ... «BMC Blogs Network, Jun 15»
The mystery of the incredible human brain: we've learned a lot, but …
This condition, known as alexia without agraphia, is caused by a tiny stroke, a blockage in blood supply, damaging the corpus callosum, ... «The Independent, Mär 15»
Interview: Jennifer Brea Talks About Obstacles, Adjustments, and …
Arrived was tachycardia, perverse metabolic collapse in the face of minor exertion, sound sensitivity, ataxia, agraphia and expressive aphasia ... «ProHealth, Aug 14»
He Wants review – Alison Moore's story of danger and desire
... for Alison Moore's He Wants. 'Lewis has the disconcerting experience of forgetting what he's read.' Illustration: Clifford Harper/Agraphia.co.uk. «The Guardian, Jul 14»
The Snow Queen by Michael Cunningham review – a novel of New …
illustration for The Snow Queen. Skating the rim of the fantastical … The Snow Queen. Photograph: Clifford Harper/agraphia.co.uk/Graphic. «The Guardian, Mai 14»
Crime Writers of Canada announces inaugural Grand Master Award …
After suffering a stroke in 2000, Engel was left with alexia sine agraphia. The condition left him unable to read, meaning he had to relearn. «National Post, Apr 14»
What Do We Have To Teach Plato?
And he uses a word, a Greek work, agraphia, which means ungrounded. It's where we're just cut off from reality unless we can argue, we can ... «WUWF, Apr 14»
What Happens When a Teacher Forgets How to Read?
Agraphia—or "word blindness"—is unusual because patients cannot read, but they can write and understand words out loud. (Courtesy of ... «Smithsonian, Jan 14»
Internet Commenter Syndrome: This Woman Can Write But Can't Read
After checking herself into the emergency room, M.P. was officially diagnosed with alexia without agraphia; in other words, she'd lost the ability ... «Gizmodo Australia, Jan 14»
The Teacher Who Forgot How To Read
ResearchBlogging.org Cuomo J, Flaster M, & Biller J (2014). Right Brain: A reading specialist with alexia without agraphia: Teacher interrupted. «Discover Magazine, Jan 14»