465 research outputs found
Influence of rehabilitation on language skills in aphasic patients
The influence of language rehabilitation on specific language skills (speaking, understanding, writing, and reading) was investigated in 281 aphasic patients (162 reeducated and 119 controls) who were subjected to a second examination no less than six months after the first. The relationship of the following factors to improvement was studied: (a) time between onset of aphasia and first examination; (b) type of aphasia; (c) overall severity of aphasia on first examination; (d) presence or absence of rehabilitation between first and subsequent examination. It was found that rehabilitation had a significant positive effect on improvement in all language skills. Time between onset and first examination and overall severity of aphasia were negatively related to improvement. The relationship of type of aphasia to improvement was not significant. Additional evidence of the efficacy of rehabilitation is provided by experience with patients who began language therapy several months or years after the onset of their language disorder
The most general ELKO matter in torsional f(R)-theories
We study f(R)-gravity with torsion in presence of the most general ELKO matter, checking the consistency of the conservation laws with the matter field equations; we discuss some mathematical features of the field equations in connection with a cosmological application
Localization of aphasic symptoms: preliminary observations with C.T. scanner (author's transl)
Electric Shock Convulsion in the Rabbit and Brain Cortex GABAA Receptor Function. Neurochemical Research
Intramodal somaesthetic recognition disorders following right and left hemisphere damage
A dissociation between apperceptive and associative processing after right and left hemisphere damage, respectively, has been suggested for visual, auditory and visuo-tactile matching tasks. This study was aimed at testing for this dissociation in a purely somaesthetic task. Forty consecutive patients with recent right and left hemispheric vascular lesions and 10 normal controls were studied. The groups were compared on two intramodal somaesthetic matching tasks, consisting of either meaningless shapes (apperceptive recognition) or meaningful objects (associative recognition). In normal controls, no significant difference was found either between the two tests, indicating a similar degree of difficulty, or between hands. An analysis of variance indicated a differential impairment of the two hemisphere-damaged groups on the two tests in comparison with normal controls. Right hemisphere lesions impaired the apperceptive, but not the associative, task, while the reverse occurred after left hemisphere lesions. This double dissociation between side of hemispheric lesion (right and left) and level of recognition impairment (apperceptive and associative) extends the results reported for other sensory modalities to intramodal tactile recognition matching. © 1995 Oxford University Press
Somesthetic-Visual Matching Disorders in Right and Left Hemisphere-Damaged Patients
Forty-nine patients with recent right (RHD) and left (LHD) hemispheric vascular lesions were compared on a task of somesthetic-visual matching of meaningful objects and of meaningless shapes. A selective impairment for shapes was found in RHD subjects, while LHD patients were impaired in object matching. This double dissociation conforms to the classical distinction between apperceptive and associative agnosia, and extends to the somesthetic modality the “double dissociation” between left and right hemispheric lesions and associative and apperceptive recognition disorders, which has been found in other modalities of agnosia. © 1991, Masson Italia Periodici s.r.l. Milano. All rights reserved
A square-torsion modification of Einstein-Cartan theory
In the present paper we consider a theory of gravity in which not only curvature but also torsion is explicitly present in the Lagrangian, both with their own coupling constant. In particular, we discuss the couplings to Dirac fields and spin fluids: in the case of Dirac fields, we discuss how in our approach, the Dirac self-interactions depend on the coupling constant as a parameter that may even make these non-linearities manifest at subatomic scales, showing different applications according to the value of the parameter we have assigned; in the case of spin fluids, we discuss FLRW cosmological models arising from the proposed theory
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