Children with Developmental Dyslexia and Acquired Alexia with Agraphia-Especially for Disorders Involving Kanji Writing-
نویسندگان
چکیده
منابع مشابه
Thalamic alexia with agraphia
Alexia with agraphia is defined as an acquired impairment affecting reading and writing ability. It can be associated with aphasia, but can also occur as an isolated entity. This impairment has classically been associated with a left angular gyrus lesion In the present study, we describe a case involving a patient who developed alexia with agraphia and other cognitive deficits after a thalamic ...
متن کاملNaming difficulties in alexia with agraphia for kanji after a left posterior inferior temporal lesion.
The case is described of a patient with alexia and agraphia for kanji, and severe anomia after a subcortical haemorrhage in the left posterior inferior temporal area. Magnetic resonance imaging at four months after onset showed a lesion in the inferior temporal and fusiform gyri, extending from the temporo-occipital junction toward the anterior third of the temporal lobe. Comparison with other ...
متن کاملdiagnostic and developmental potentials of dynamic assessment for writing skill
این پایان نامه بدنبال بررسی کاربرد ارزیابی مستمر در یک محیط یادگیری زبان دوم از طریق طرح چهار سوال تحقیق زیر بود: (1) درک توانایی های فراگیران زمانیکه که از طریق برآورد عملکرد مستقل آنها امکان پذیر نباشد اما در طول جلسات ارزیابی مستمر مشخص شوند; (2) امکان تقویت توانایی های فراگیران از طریق ارزیابی مستمر; (3) سودمندی ارزیابی مستمر در هدایت آموزش فردی به سمتی که به منطقه ی تقریبی رشد افراد حساس ا...
15 صفحه اولAlexia without agraphia.
Alexia without agraphia (also called pure alexia or word blindness) was the first of the disconnection syndromes (syndromes caused by disconnection of the right from the left cerebral hemisphere through interruption of the communication pathways between them) to be described. Déjerine in 1892 reported a patient who developed this syndrome after an infarct of the left occipital lobe and splenium...
متن کاملAlexia without agraphia
In the late 19th century, Déjérine first described this entity in a man with associated incomplete right homonymous hemianopia from a lesion of the left fusiform and lingual gyri. He subsequently deduced that the left angular gyrus stored the visual representation of words (needed for reading and writing), and that disconnecting the visual inputs of both hemispheres from the left angular gyrus ...
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: The Japan Journal of Logopedics and Phoniatrics
سال: 2010
ISSN: 0030-2813,1884-3646
DOI: 10.5112/jjlp.51.245