Open AccessJournal Article
The concepts of agnosia, apraxia and aphasia after a history of a hundred years.
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This article is published in Journal of the Mount Sinai Hospital, New York.The article was published on 1965-11-01 and is currently open access. It has received 5 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Agnosia & Apraxia.read more
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Journal ArticleDOI
Recognition and imitation of pantomimed motor acts after unilateral parietal and premotor lesions: a perspective on apraxia.
Ulrike Halsband,Ulrike Halsband,J Schmitt,M Weyers,Ferdinand Binkofski,G Grützner,H.-J Freund +6 more
TL;DR: Interestingly, LPAR patients were worse when imitating gestures on their own bodies than imitating movements with reference to an external object use with most pronounced deficits in the spatial domain, and bimanual tasks were severely disturbed, in particular when executing different movements simultaneously with the right and left hands.
Book ChapterDOI
Motor and Perceptual Functions of the Left Hemisphere and Their Interaction
TL;DR: The cerebral hemispheres are organized asymmetrically for functional behavior as mentioned in this paper, with the left hemisphere specialized for language, the right for nonverbal functions, and a number of research studies have suggested a variety of non-linguistic behaviors that are better performed by the dominant left hemisphere.
Journal ArticleDOI
Visual, acoustic, and semantic processing of word pairs.
TL;DR: Three Reaction Time experiments in which normal subjects judged the visual, acoustic, and semantic characteristics of identical, rhyme, synonym, and unrelated word pairs indicated that acoustic processing is not a necessary precursor to semantic processing.
Book ChapterDOI
Pictorial Perception: Hemispheric Specialization and Developmental Regression in the Neurologically Impaired
TL;DR: This chapter reviews pictorial perception in neuropsychology, and focuses on hemispheric specialization and developmental regression in the neurologically impaired patients, revealing that the left and right hemispheres both contribute to performance.