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Anna Berti

Researcher at University of Turin

Publications -  89
Citations -  9135

Anna Berti is an academic researcher from University of Turin. The author has contributed to research in topics: Anosognosia & Neglect. The author has an hindex of 32, co-authored 85 publications receiving 8824 citations. Previous affiliations of Anna Berti include University of Milan & University of Padua.

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Journal Article

Technetium-99m HM-PAO-SPECT Study of Regional Cerebral Perfusion in Early Alzheimer's Disease

TL;DR: In patients with early AD, SPECT provides functional information to be compared with clinical and psychometric data, and asymmetries of relative perfusion between cerebral hemispheres were demonstrated when language was affected or visuospatial functions were unevenly impaired.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Development of the Concept of Money and Its Value: A Longitudinal Study.

Anna Berti, +1 more
- 01 Dec 1981 - 
TL;DR: BERTI et al. as mentioned in this paper conducted a longitudinal study of 80 subjects between the ages of 3 and 8 years old to determine their conceptions of money and its value, and found that the development of the notions under investigation proceeds in 6 definable stages.
Journal ArticleDOI

'Moving' a paralysed hand: bimanual coupling effect in patients with anosognosia for hemiplegia

TL;DR: It is suggested that anosognosic patients may have intact motor intentionality and planning for the plegic hand, rather than being merely an inexplicable confabulation, which can produce objective constraints on what the intact hand does.
Journal ArticleDOI

The left inferior frontal gyrus is crucial for reading the mind in the eyes: brain lesion evidence.

TL;DR: It is suggested that the left IFG is a key region in reading the mind in the eyes, probably involved in a more general impairment of a semantic working memory system that facilitates reasoning about what others are feeling and thinking as expressed by the eyes.
Book ChapterDOI

Dyschiria. An Attempt at its Systemic Explanation

TL;DR: It is argued, in this chapter, that unilateral neglect is still in need of a systemic explanation and a theoretical neural model of an analog subserving both sensory and mental representation in the visuo-spatial domain is outlined.