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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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Matter of Mind: A Neurologist's View of Brain-Behavior Relationships

TL;DR: One of the leading figures in behavioural and cognitive neurology uses patient vignettes and other examples from his rich professional life to show just how much knowledge about brain functions such as reading, writing, language, control of emotions, skilled movement, perception, attention, and motiviation has been gained from the study of patients with diseases of or damage to the brain.
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Verbal and visuospatial memory in lateral onset Parkinson disease: time is of the essence.

TL;DR: The results indicate that the RHO PD group experienced a significant decline in verbal free recall and a significant improvement in visuospatial free recall from the immediate to the delayed trials and that the LHO PD patients experienced no significant changes.
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Regional leukoaraiosis and cognition in non-demented older adults

TL;DR: The location, depth, and percentage of leukoaraiosis in white matter among a sample of non-demented older adults and associations between these leukoarioasis metrics and composites of cognitive efficiency, working memory, and inhibitory function are learned.
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Hemispheric differences in malignant middle cerebral artery stroke

TL;DR: MMCA stroke appears to be more common on the right, and this laterality is also associated with significantly higher morbidity, as well as possible new treatments to reduce mortality and morbidity associated with MMCA.
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Early‐Motor Phenotype Relates to Neuropsychiatric and Cognitive Disorders in Huntington's Disease

TL;DR: To determine the relationships between the motor phenotype and the presence of specific neuropsychiatric and neuropsychological disorders in patients with early motor‐manifest Huntington's disease (HD).