PAROLE IN INGLESE ASSOCIATE CON «PARAGRAPHIA»
paragraphia
paragraphia
define
disorder
marked
writing
words
letters
other
than
those
intended
loss
ability
express
ideas
usually
caused
brain
psychiatry
habitual
different
word
letter
from
often
result
mental
injury
medical
graph
write
dictation
although
understood
when
another
more
merriam
webster
condition
some
disorders
which
written
seen
heard
what
made
want
look
defined
form
aphasia
cerebral
characterized
unintentional
omission
transposition
insertion
origin
wordreference
ˌpærəˈɡrɑːfɪə
reverso
meaning
also
paragraphical
paragraphic
paragraph
paragraphically
springerreference
unintended
phonemes
syllables
during
attempts
errors
similar
spoken
paraphasias
collins
american
always
official
comprehensive
authoritative
rely
date
10 LIBRI IN INGLESE ASSOCIATI CON «PARAGRAPHIA»
Scopri l'uso di
paragraphia nella seguente selezione bibliografica. Libri associati con
paragraphia e piccoli estratti per contestualizzare il loro uso nella letteratura.
1
Aphasia: A Clinical Perspective
S. General Classification of Paralexias and Paragraphias TYPE OF ERROR
Literal Paralexia and Paragraphia Omission Addition Displacement Substitution
Verbal Paralexia and Paragraphia Formal verbal paralexia and paragraphia ...
David Frank Benson, Alfredo Ardila, 1996
2
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis and the Frontotemporal Dementias
Watanabe further reported that 'The patient had paragraphia in writing kanji: for
example, the patient wrote 'I? [atsuI' meaning thick instead of 'i'll [netus]' meaning
hot. Moreover, when we showed a sake cup (E) to the patient and asked the ...
3
A Dictionary of Neurological Signs
From the linguistic viewpoint, two types of paragraphia may be distinguished as
follows: Surface/lexical/semantic dysgraphia: misspelling of irregular words,
producing phonologically plausible errors (e.g. simtums for symptoms); this is
seen ...
4
Brain and Behaviour: Critical Concepts in Psychology
There is no paraphasia nor paragraphia, because the path B M A B is whole; we
could therefore designate such cases as "Isolated speech-deafness," as the
incapacity for repetition and writing to dictation may he included under the term ...
Volitional writing is still ac- companied with well-marked paragraphia, though
there is improvement in this respect. He wrote the following letter to me on the 4th
of June:— “Juni Mittwoch d. 4ten.—Herr Professor Dr. Lichtheim. Ich möchte
heute ...
Yosef Grodzinsky Professor and Canadian Research Chair in Neurolinguistics McGill University, Katrin Amunts Professor of Structural-Functional Brain Mapping Aachen University, 2006
6
Black's Medical Dictionary
Paragraphia. Misplacement of words, or of letters in words, or wrong spelling, or
use of wrong words in writing as a result of a lesion in the speech region of the
BRAIN. Parainfluenza. Viruses. These are included in the paramyxoviruses (see
...
Bloomsbury Publishing, 2005
7
Concise English Dictionary
-at. — adv. para graph 'ica My. [Gr. paragraphos, written alongside — para,
beside, beyond, graphein. to write.] paragraphia par-a-grafi-a, n. writing of wrong
words and letters, owing to disease or injury of the brain.— adj. paragraphic (-
grafik).
8
On aphasia, being a contribution to the subject of the ...
The subjects of sensory aphasia make mistakes in writing, which correspond
more or less with those made in speaking, the affection being named by
Kussmaul " paragraphia." Paragraphia admits, like paraphasia, of being divided
into several ...
9
Clinical Neuropsychology
This has been termed “neglect paragraphia” (Valenstein and Heilman, 1978). In
addition to horizontal neglect, neglect of lower (Rapcsak et al., 1988) and upper (
Shelton et al., 1990) vertical space and neglect of radial space (Shelton et al., ...
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
10
Language, Thought, and the Brain
He had a selective disorder ofreading and writing, replacing letters similar in their
visual form (literal paragraphia). There was also a selective, modality-specific
short term verbal memory deficit, with a significant impairment in memory for
words ...
Tatyana Glezerman, Victoria I. Balkoski, Victoria Balkoski, 1999