10 BÜCHER, DIE MIT «WORD BLINDNESS» IM ZUSAMMENHANG STEHEN
Entdecke den Gebrauch von
word blindness in der folgenden bibliographischen Auswahl. Bücher, die mit
word blindness im Zusammenhang stehen und kurze Auszüge derselben, um seinen Gebrauch in der Literatur kontextbezogen darzustellen.
1
Encyclopedia of Special Education
They both used the term congenital word blindness to describe adults and
children with clear, pronounced reading disabilities. Specifi- cally, Hinshelwood (
1917) hypothesized that children with congenital word blindness sustained a
brain ...
Cecil R. Reynolds, Elaine Fletcher-Janzen, 2007
2
Twentieth Century Neurology: The British Contribution
58-66. Geschwind N and Levitsky, W. (1968). Human brain: Left-right
asymmetries in temporal speech region. Science 161, 186-187. Hinshelwood, J. (
1895). Word-blindness and visual memory. Lancet 2, 1564-1570. Hinshelwood, J
. (1896a).
3
Classic Cases in Neuropsychology
Why then did Dejerine use the term word blindness ('cécité verbale') when he
referred to Monsieur C? 'Word blindness' was a term in common use in Europe
around the turn of the 20th century (e.g. Hinshelwood, 1895, 1900, 1917;
Kussmaul, ...
Chris Code, Yves Joanette, Andre Roch Lecours, 2013
4
Developmental Cognitive Neuropsychology
Both acquired and congenital word-blindness were studied in detail by James
Hinshelwood, a surgeon at the Glasgow Eye Infirmary and a lecturer on
ophthalmology in the Glasgow Western Medical School, who worked at the end
of the 19th ...
5
How to Detect and Manage Dyslexia: A Reference and Resource ...
James Hinshelwood Dr James Hinshelwood, an opthalmologist and assistant
surgeon at the Glasgow Eye Infirmary, described in an article entitled 'Word-
blindness and visual memory' (Hinshelwood, 1895) the case of a patient, a
teacher of ...
6
Towards a Sociology of Dyslexia
Hinshelwood (1917), like Berlin (1887), dismissed the theory that congenital
word-blindness was due to a visual impairment, but stated that it was due to
defects in both the right and the left hemispheres of the brain. The research
hypothesised ...
Stephen James Macdonald, 2009
7
Concise Encyclopedia of Special Education: A Reference for ...
242 CONGENITAL WORD BLINDNESS, HISTORY OF Delange. F . Beckers. C .
Hofer. R . Konig. MP., Monaco. E.& Val, rone, S 119791. Neonatal screening for
congenital bypotbyroidism in Europe. Acia Endocrinoiogica. 90 1Suppl 2231.
Cecil R. Reynolds, Elaine Fletcher-Janzen, 2004
8
The History of Special Education: From Isolation to Integration
At the outset investigators regarded the condition as a form of impercep- tion,
sometimes called agnosia, sometimes mind blindness, word blindness, or word
deafness. Word blindness was the most widely described (e.g., Hinshel- wood ...
9
Reader in the History of Aphasia: From Franz Gall to Norman ...
In earlier observations (Broad- bent, Dejerine, d'Heilly and Chentemesse,
Rosenthal), however, either word blindness did not exist in isolation, but was
combined with other forms of aphasia, in particular with word deafness, or the
lesion found ...
10
Encyclopedia of Special Education, 3 Volume Set
... for cluttering, disorganized verbal output, hyperactivity, and difficulty with figure
-group concepts (Critchley, in Franklin, 1962; DeHirsch, 1952). Heller (1963)
described screening criteria for detecting word blindness in school-aged children
...
Cecil R. Reynolds, Elaine Fletcher-Janzen, 2007
10 NACHRICHTEN, IN DENEN DER BEGRIFF «WORD BLINDNESS» VORKOMMT
Erfahre, worüber man in den einheimischen und internationalen Medien spricht und wie der Begriff
word blindness im Kontext der folgenden Nachrichten gebraucht wird.
New research questions supposed link between bad eyesight and …
In the first study of its kind, scientists found no evidence that visual deficiencies are linked to severe cases of a condition sometimes known as "word blindness". «ITV News, Mai 15»
The History Of Dyslexia
He noticed that several of his patients could not read properly and regularly used words in the wrong order. He introduced the term 'word blindness' to describe ... «PsychCentral.com, Jul 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 Flickr user Cramo ... «Smithsonian, Jan 14»
The Teacher Who Couldn't Read
Dejerine hypothesized that the man's word blindness came about because his intact right occipital cortex could not make connections to language areas of the ... «National Geographic, Jan 14»
Pure Word Blindness Stopped With Letter Tracing Technique: What …
But in a testament to humans' will to triumph over adversity, M.P. devised a method to tackle her word blindness that caught the attention of neurological ... «Medical Daily, Jan 14»
The Upside of Dyslexia
Since the phenomenon of “word blindness” was first documented more than a century ago, scientists have searched for the causes of dyslexia, and for therapies ... «New York Times, Feb 12»
Did Leonardo da Vinci's dyslexia help him to be a master painter?
The two men both suffered from the 'word blindness' that affects as many as one in 12 children – but it seems it can also bring the keen spatial awareness that ... «Daily Mail, Nov 10»
The Writer Who Couldn't Read
He was suffering from what the French neuroscientist Stanislas Dehaene calls "word blindness." His eyes worked. He could see shapes on a page, but they ... «NPR, Jun 10»
Number blindness more common than word blindness
In a study led by researchers from University College in London, it was found that dyscalculia, a learning disability that leaves sufferers unable to deal with ... «News-Medical.net, Jun 08»
Dyslexia begins when the wires don't meet
Sally Shaywitz, a dyslexia expert at Yale University, says that is the "word form" area. .... In 1909, Dr. McCready identified 41 reported cases of "word blindness" ... «Pittsburgh Post Gazette, Feb 07»