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Schmidt, Gwenda L.; Cardillo, Eileen R.; Kranjec, Alexander; Lehet, Matthew; Widick, Page; Chatterjee, Anjan – Neuropsychologia, 2012
Current research on analogy processing assumes that different conceptual relations are treated similarly. However, just as words and concepts are related in distinct ways, different kinds of analogies may employ distinct types of relationships. An important distinction in how words are related is the difference between associative (dog-bone) and…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Neurological Impairments, Patients, Language Processing
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Haubold, Alexander; Peterson, Bradley S.; Bansal, Ravi – Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2012
Brain morphometry in recent decades has increased our understanding of the neural bases of psychiatric disorders by localizing anatomical disturbances to specific nuclei and subnuclei of the brain. At least some of these disturbances precede the overt expression of clinical symptoms and possibly are endophenotypes that could be used to diagnose an…
Descriptors: Evidence, Clinical Diagnosis, Patients, Brain Hemisphere Functions
McGoldrick, Patricia E. – Exceptional Parent, 2010
In the first installment of this series (Exceptional Parent Magazine, May 2010), the author discussed epilepsy surgery performed in persons whose areas of brain abnormality were initially deemed to be too extensive to safely perform a resection of the involved area. The process leading to surgical remediation for seizures is an involved one, but…
Descriptors: Epilepsy, Seizures, Quality of Life, Surgery
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Parikh, Sumit – Developmental Disabilities Research Reviews, 2010
The nervous system contains some of the body's most metabolically demanding cells that are highly dependent on ATP produced via mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation. Thus, the neurological system is consistently involved in patients with mitochondrial disease. Symptoms differ depending on the part of the nervous system affected. Although almost…
Descriptors: Diseases, Patients, Anatomy, Genetic Disorders
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Hillis, Argye E. – Brain and Language, 2007
This paper provides a brief review of various uses of magnetic resonance perfusion imaging in the investigation of brain/language relationships. The reviewed studies illustrate how perfusion imaging can reveal areas of brain where dysfunction due to low blood flow is associated with specific language deficits, and where restoration of blood flow…
Descriptors: Patients, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Neurology, Diagnostic Tests
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Heiss, W.-D.; Thiel, A. – Brain and Language, 2006
Activation studies in patients with aphasia due to stroke or tumours in the dominant hemisphere have revealed effects of disinhibition in ipsilateral perilesional and in contralateral homotopic cortical regions, referred to as collateral and transcallosal disinhibition. These findings were supported by studies with selective disturbance of…
Descriptors: Aphasia, Patients, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Inhibition
Hillis, Argye E.; Work, Melissa; Barker, Peter B.; Jacobs, Michael A.; Breese, Elisabeth L.; Maurer, Kristin – Brain, 2004
A traditional method of localizing brain functions has been to identify shared areas of brain damage in individuals who have a particular deficit. The rationale of this "lesion overlap" approach is straightforward: if the individuals can no longer perform the function, the area of brain damaged in most of these individuals must have been…
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Brain, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Neurological Impairments
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Emanuel, Ricky – Journal of Child Psychotherapy, 2004
This paper suggests that some neuroscience concepts particularly concerned with brain pathways in trauma and fear, as well as the neurobiology of emotion, provide an additional vertex to the psychoanalytic understanding of patients' material. The role of the body has been neglected in psychoanalytic thought and formulations in favour of purely…
Descriptors: Patients, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Fear, Trauma