Results 251 to 260 of about 199,677 (309)

Perceptual Defense in Anxiety Disorders

Perceptual and Motor Skills, 2003
Prior research by MacLeod and Rutherford (1992) indicates that anxious subjects could have perceptual strategies different from nonanxious subjects. 42 verbal stimuli of six types (disease, social anxiety, panic, agoraphobia, obsessive–compulsive, and neutral) were tachistoscopically presented to three groups of subjects, aged 18 to 60 years: Panic ...
Claudia, Poloni   +3 more
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Perceptual Regulation and Mental Disorder

Journal of Mental Science, 1962
While anomalies of sensory and perceptual responses characterize many mental disorders it is only recently that any serious attempt has been made to investigate them experimentally.
N F, DIXON, T E, LEAR
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Perceptual Disorders in Schizophrenia

American Journal of Psychiatry, 1967
Schizophrenia may involve a perceptual distortion characterized by an ontogenetically more primitive mode of perception in which parts of a whole are seen as separate and unrelated.
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Auditory Perceptual Disorders

Archives of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, 1977
The author defines children with an auditory perceptual handicap as those with normal intelligence and hearing acuity who have difficulty discriminating among and interpreting auditory stimuli. They may have difficulty localizing the source of sound; comprehending the meaning of environmental sounds; discriminating among sounds and words; reproducing ...
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Perception and Perceptual Disorders

2003
Abstract Perception is our primary awareness of the world; it forms our first and strongest cognitive relation with the environment. In deciphering the cognitive mechanisms underlying normal and abnormal perception, we find that the lines between sensation, perception, memory, and thought processes blur.
Orrin Devinsky, Mark D’esposito
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Disorders of the Perceptual-Motor System

2009
The study of patients with movement disorders provides insight into both the functional organization and the neural substrates of the perceptual-motor system. By and large, we feel this source of information has been underutilized within the basic science of motor control.
Steven A, Jax, H Branch, Coslett
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Developmental perceptual-motor disorders.

The Australian journal of physiotherapy, 2014
To understand or even begin to conceive the problems of the perceptually-motor handicapped is an enormous task. We have developed our personalities and abilities in a stable and meaningful environment and our security lies in our ability to manipulate and give meaning to this environment.
Y, Burns, P, Watter
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Perceptual Span in Schizophrenia and Affective Disorders

The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 1984
Perceptual span was assessed in schizophrenic, bipolar affective disorder-manic, bipolar affective disorder-depressed, and nonpsychotic inpatients. Both schizophrenics and manics processed less information than depressives, and did not differ from each other.
M E, Strauss   +3 more
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Treatment of Visual Perceptual Disorders Post Stroke

Topics in Stroke Rehabilitation, 2003
Visual perceptual disorders are a common clinical consequence of stroke. They include unilateral neglect, which has a major impact on rehabilitation outcome. The nature of the behavioral deficits associated with neglect has suggested that behavioral modification strategies may improve performance.
Jeffrey W, Jutai   +5 more
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