K
Kenneth M. Heilman
Researcher at University of Florida
Publications - 712
Citations - 40917
Kenneth M. Heilman is an academic researcher from University of Florida. The author has contributed to research in topics: Neglect & Apraxia. The author has an hindex of 100, co-authored 706 publications receiving 39122 citations. Previous affiliations of Kenneth M. Heilman include Jerusalem Mental Health Center & McKnight Brain Institute.
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Impaired Endogenously Evoked Automated Reaching in Parkinson's Disease
TL;DR: Findings lend support to an emerging view that there is a loss of automated control in PD patients that contributes to impairments in voluntary control, and that basal ganglia–cortical circuits are critical for the maintenance and balance of multijoint control.
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Autobiographical memory: Influence of right hemisphere damage on emotionality and specificity
Cynthia R Cimino,Cynthia R Cimino,Mieke Verfaellie,Mieke Verfaellie,Dawn Bowers,Dawn Bowers,Kenneth M. Heilman,Kenneth M. Heilman +7 more
TL;DR: In terms of RHD patients' overall difficulties in processing emotional material and in terms of the nature of autobiographical memory, the ability of right hemisphere damaged (RHD) patients to recall autobiographical material in response to emotional versus nonemotional cues is investigated.
Journal Article
Disorders of visual attention
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A pilot study evaluating presurgery neuroanatomical biomarkers for postoperative cognitive decline after total knee arthroplasty in older adults.
Catherine C. Price,Jared J. Tanner,Ilona M. Schmalfuss,Cynthia Garvan,Peter Gearen,David Dickey,Kenneth M. Heilman,David L. McDonagh,David J. Libon,Christiana M. Leonard,Dawn Bowers,Terri G. Monk +11 more
TL;DR: This pilot study suggests that executive and memory declines occur in nondemented adults undergoing orthopedic surgery, and Severity of preoperative cerebrovascular disease may be relevant for understanding executive decline, in particular.
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The Significance of Body Part as Tool Errors in Limb Apraxia
Anastasia M. Raymer,Lynn M. Maher,Anne L. Foundas,Kenneth M. Heilman,Kenneth M. Heilman,L.J. Gonzalez Rothi,L.J. Gonzalez Rothi +6 more
TL;DR: Analysis of BPT errors in LBD and normal subjects who were reinstructed to modify the inappropriate BPT responses when they occurred underscores the need for reinstruction when a BPT error occurs to determine whether it represents a true B PT error, a sign of limb apraxia.