Medicina: Neuropsicologia cognitiva
English |
anarthria |
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Attestation |
3
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Part of speech |
Noun
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Grammatical label |
uncountable
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Definition |
An acquired difficulty in writing or spelling. Agraphia is commonly associated with aphasia and alexia, although it may occur without other linguistic impairments. An acquired difficulty in writing or spelling. Agraphia is commonly associated with aphasia and alexia, although it may occur without other linguistic impairments. When seen in isolation, agraphia typically results from superior parietal lobe or the second frontal gyrus of the language dominant hemisphere.
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Definition source |
Loring D.W. 1999 Loring D.W. 1999
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Context |
Again, it is based on center-lesion theory, obviously not connection theory. Throughout history (they begin with Auburtin, 1861), this frontal lobe apraxia of speech has been referred to as “aphemia”, Broca’s aphasia, motor aphasia, anarthria, verbal aphasia, phonetic disintegration of speech, apraxia, apraxic dysarthria, cortical dysarthria, and oral 7. Brown (1972, chap. 10) drew a strong correlation between ideational apraxia posterior fluent paraphasic speeches. He wrote: we might almost speak of ideational apraxia as a ’fluent’ apraxia, contrasting it with ’non-fluent’ apraxia of anterior origin.
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Context source |
Sarno 1991
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Figure source |
Johnson et al. 1999
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Synonym |
Apraxia of speech, Speech apraxia
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Subject field |
Aphasia
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Sub-field (level 1) |
Aphasiology
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Sub-field (level 2) |
Clinical neuropsychology
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Sub-field (level 3) |
Aphasic syndromes Aphasic deficits
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Generic concept |
Morphological error, Pure form
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Related concept |
Pure alexia, Pure agraphia, Alexia with agraphia, Pure word deafness, Dysarthria
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it |
Anartria
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Reliability code |
3
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