Aphasia, Alexia, and AgraphiaChurchill Livingstone, 1979 - Broj stranica: 213 |
Iz unutrašnjosti knjige
Rezultati 1 - 3 od 18.
Stranica 4
... possible and unabashedly utilizes a localizationist approach to aphasia . The information presented here is not offered to confirm or refute any present or past theory of language . Rather it represents a compendium of clinical ...
... possible and unabashedly utilizes a localizationist approach to aphasia . The information presented here is not offered to confirm or refute any present or past theory of language . Rather it represents a compendium of clinical ...
Stranica 90
... possible sites of transcortical motor aphasia ; TS = possible sites for transcortical sensory aphasia . Involvement of borderzone area both anteriorly and posteriorly underlies the mixed transcorti- cal aphasia picture . This ...
... possible sites of transcortical motor aphasia ; TS = possible sites for transcortical sensory aphasia . Involvement of borderzone area both anteriorly and posteriorly underlies the mixed transcorti- cal aphasia picture . This ...
Stranica 184
... possible for many aphasics who fail the more complete types of sign language ( Skelly et al , 1974 ) . Communication through signing may serve as an additional channel for language stimulation ( a channel for deblocking ) and thus prove ...
... possible for many aphasics who fail the more complete types of sign language ( Skelly et al , 1974 ) . Communication through signing may serve as an additional channel for language stimulation ( a channel for deblocking ) and thus prove ...
Sadržaj
Introduction | 1 |
Historical Background | 12 |
Neuropathological Substrate of Aphasia | 18 |
Autorska prava | |
Broj ostalih dijelova koji nisu prikazani: 15
Uobičajeni izrazi i fraze
ability abnormality accepted activities additional agraphia alexia anatomical anomia aphasic aphasic patients aphasic syndromes appears approach apraxia associated auditory become Benson better brain Broca aphasia called cause cerebral characteristics clinical combination common complication comprehension conduction aphasia considerable considered consistently correlation cortical damage defect demonstrated described descriptions developed difficulty discussed disorder disturbance dominant evaluation examiner fail field findings fluent frequently frontal hand hemisphere important improvement indicate individual involving language function later lesion less limited localization loss major material motor neuroanatomical neurologic nonfluent normal noted observations occur offer output particularly pathology patient performed posterior present problems produce proved pure recent recognized recovery remains repetition reported scan seen sensory separate severe significant specific speech spoken language studies suggested syndrome techniques term therapy tion transcortical types understand usually variations variety vascular verbal output visual Wernicke aphasia writing written