Image for Modular Deficits in Alzheimer-Type Dementia

Modular Deficits in Alzheimer-Type Dementia

Part of the Issues in the Biology of Language and Cognition series
See all formats and editions

Bringing models and methods of cognitive neuropsychology to bear on the study of dementing disorders, these contributions present sound evidence that diseases of the Alzheimer type compromise brain function in a highly selective manner, affecting some aspects of cognition while sparing others.

Included are original case studies that explore in detail the nature of the linguistic, semantic, and visuoperceptual disorders in patients with degenerative dementias.

The book pursues a number of themes with important ramifications for the study of higher mental functions.

By exploring the neurocognitive modules that are the targets of degenerative processes, it shows that Alzheimer's disease is not one disease but a complex of disease states, that clinical diversity is an essential feature of Alzheimer's disease and Alzheimer-type dementia, that this diversity reflects to a large extent the differential involvement of particular neural systems that support cognition, and that when suitable methods and models are applied, studies of Alzheimer-type dementia can expand our understanding of basic brain-behavior relations.Contributors: M.

Moscovitch and C. Umilta, M. F. Schwartz, J. A. Stark, A. R. Damasio, G. W. Van Hoesen, B. T. Hyman, J. B. Chawluk, M. Grossman, J. A. Calcano-Perez, A. Alavi, H. I. Hurtig, M. Reivich, A. Martin, J. Baron, M. Moscovitch, H. Chertkow, D. Bub, E. M. Saffran, E. J. Fitzpatrick-DeSalme, H. B. Coslett

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£8.96 Save 25.00%
RRP £11.95
Product Details
Bradford Books
0262192985 / 9780262192989
Hardback
23/01/1991
United States
English
374 pages
216 x 254 mm, 703 grams
Professional & Vocational/Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly/Undergraduate Learn More