Results 111 to 120 of about 1,477 (142)
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Ideomotor Apraxia: a Call to Action
Neurocase, 2001Although ideomotor apraxia (IM) has been a topic of investigation since the early 20th century, progress in studying the disorder has been hindered by important (and sometimes unarticulated) differences in the underlying theoretical models of various investigative groups.
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Defective motor learning in ideomotor apraxia
Neurology, 1975Liepmann suggested that the left hemisphere contained the engrams for motor sequences. Other investigators have suggested that ideomotor apraxia may be caused by either a destruction of these engrams or a disconnection of these engrams from motor systems in the nondominant hemisphere.
K M, Heilman +2 more
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NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL AND NEUROANATOMICAL DIMENSIONS OF IDEOMOTOR APRAXIA
Brain, 1992Fifty-five right-handed men with left hemisphere stroke were systematically investigated for ideomotor apraxia of various body parts. Standardized aphasia and apraxia examinations in all cases, and appropriately timed CT in 28 cases, were used for analysis of psychological and anatomical properties of ideomotor apraxia. It is not possible to ignore the
M P, Alexander +4 more
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Callosal ideomotor apraxia in Alzheimer’s disease
Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology, 2016Impaired ability to perform skilled movements with the left upper limb in patients with corpus callosum injury has been well described (callosal apraxia) with some displaying spatial-temporal errors primarily in response to verbal commands (verbal callosal disconnection apraxia), with imitation, and when using actual tools (callosal ideomotor apraxia).
Ann Marie, Cimino-Knight +3 more
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Motor Performance in Aphasia and Ideomotor Apraxia
Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1994Motor performance in 11 patients with ideomotor apraxia, 11 with aphasia without such apraxia, and 11 normal controls was compared. These three groups were matched on age, sex, education, severity of aphasia, intelligence, and size of lesion. Measures of aiming, tapping, line-following, and steadiness developed by Schoppe in 1974 were used.
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Selective deficit of praxis imagery in ideomotor apraxia
Neurology, 1997We studied imagery for learned, skilled movements (praxis imagery) in a patient with severe ideomotor apraxia and intact language abilities. This patient, who made predominantly spatial and movement errors when performing transitive movements demonstrating the use of tools (transitive gestures), was also impaired in her ability to answer imagery ...
C, Ochipa +5 more
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Error Types in Ideomotor Apraxia: A Qualitative Analysis
Brain and Cognition, 1994Seventeen brain-damaged subjects with dominant hemisphere pathology and 24 matched control subjects were asked to perform simple familiar gestures under four conditions: (1) verbal command (pantomime), (2) imitation, (3) with the actual object, and (4) verbal command a second time. The subjects subsequently watched a video of an actor performing simple
S, McDonald, R L, Tate, J, Rigby
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Ideomotor Apraxia: Behavioral Dimensions and Neuroanatomical Basis
Brain and Language, 1997Ideomotor apraxia, disordered movement execution to command, commonly follows left-hemisphere damage, implying left-hemisphere dominance for certain kinds of movements. To delineate this dominance we used different command modalities to elicit meaningful movements and tested imitation of nonsense movements.
A, Schnider +3 more
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RECOVERY FROM IDEOMOTOR APRAXIA
Brain, 1987In this study we investigated whether there are predictors for recovery from ideomotor apraxia (IMA) in patients with focal left hemisphere vascular lesions. Recovery was followed in 26 patients, first examined between 15 and 30 days postonset. They were apraxic at the first examination and had a second (and in some cases, a third) neuropsychological ...
A. Basso +4 more
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Ideomotor limb apraxia in Huntington's disease
Journal of Neurology, 2008Ideomotor limb apraxia is the disturbance of planning and of execution of motor activity,which is not caused by a dysfunction of the motor or sensory nervous system. Apraxia is a diagnostic criterion in dementialike Alzheimer's disease. However, this symptom may also occur in dementia with subcortical lesions like Huntington's disease (HD), a ...
Anna K, Hödl +5 more
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