10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «APRACTIC»
Discover the use of
apractic in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
apractic and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Neuropsychological Studies of Apraxia and Related Disorders
The majority, i.e. 52% of the frontal patients, were non— apractic, 24% border-
line and only 24% were apractic. The reverse was true among the parietalZ
patients, 62% of whom were apractic, 11% border-line and 27% non— apractic (
X ...
2
Aphasia: A Clinical Perspective
Hecaen and Albert (1978) defined apractic agraphia as the inability to form
normal graphemes, producing inversions and distortions instead. The patient
with apractic agraphia retains the ability to spell and can compose words with
block ...
David Frank Benson, Alfredo Ardila, 1996
3
Three-dimensional Kinematics of the Eye, Head and Limb Movements
In comparison to the nearly linear synergy between the elbow and shoulder joint
angles in a normal subject (b) the synergy in the apractic patient was clearly
disturbed with larger variability from trial to trial (g). The analysis of coupling of ...
M Fetter, T Haslwanter, H Misslich, 1997
4
Physical Eloquence and the Biology of Writing
A similar progression is described in Chapter Six, where I discuss the
neurological breakdown of writing ability as aligned with three dysfunctional
styles: apractic, graphic, and alexic. When these problems are overcome, or, in
developmental ...
5
Agnosia and Apraxia: Selected Papers of Liepmann, Lange, and ...
an adequate search for apractic symptoms. Observing such a patient in his
customary environment or asking whether he has noticed disorders in action is
not a sufficient test for apraxia. The finer degrees of motor apraxia appear only in
the ...
6
Cerebral Control of Speech and Limb Movements
From this thorough pre-protocol inventory, none of the 'pure' apractic speakers
demonstrated any clear evidence of aphasia. We thus felt confident that, on
typical clinical assessment, none could be considered aphasic. Furthermore,
subjects ...
7
Linguistic Disorders and Pathologies: An International Handbook
On the basis of these earlier studies, we (Kerschensteiner/Poeck 1974; Poeck/
Kerschensteiner 1975) developed a method that permitted the coding of those
individual components that constitute apractic movements. That is, we were able
to ...
Gerhard Blanken, Jürgen Dittmann, Hannelore Grimm, 1993
8
Neuropsychological Interventions: Clinical Research and Practice
In a sample of 699 right-handed patients with left-hemisphere lesions, Papagno,
Delia Sala, and Basso (1993) studied a double aphasia- apraxia dissociation
and found 10 patients to be apractic but not aphasic, and 149 patients to be ...
9
Neuropsychological Studies of Apraxia and Related Disorders
The majority, i.e. 52% of the frontal patients, were non- apractic, 24% border-line
and only 24% were apractic. The reverse was true among the parietal patients,
62% of whom were apractic, 11% border-line and 27% non- apractic (X = 6.6946,
...
10
The Neuroscience of Handwriting: Applications for Forensic ...
The term “apractic agraphia” refers to a specific condition characterized by
deteriorated handwriting in the presence of normal sensorimotor function,
cognitive, and language abilities. Apractic agraphia has been described as “loss
of motor ...
Michael P. Caligiuri, Linton A. Mohammed, 2012