Disturbances of lower and higher visual capacities caused by occipital damage : with special reference to the psychopathological, pedagogical, industrial, and social implications

Bibliographic Information

Disturbances of lower and higher visual capacities caused by occipital damage : with special reference to the psychopathological, pedagogical, industrial, and social implications

W. Poppelreuter ; translated by J. Zihl ; with the assistance of L. Weiskrantz

(History of neuroscience, no. 2)

Clarendon Press , Oxford university Press, 1990

Other Title

Psychischen Schädigungen durch Kopfschuss im Kriege 1914/16

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Note

Translation of: Die psychischen Schädigungen durch Kopfschuss im Kriege 1914/16. Band 1

Includes bibliographical references

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

During the First World War many soldiers suffered brain injuries, mostly from gunshot wounds. The localized nature of these injuries made them of special significance for neuropsychological studies and they were the subject of research by British and German psychologists and neurologists working in military hospitals. The work done by Walther Poppelreuter in Germany is of particular interest. He was one of the first to design and use precise experimental methods for neuropsychological assessment and analysis. He was also one of the first to suggest a relatively specific processing of visual submodalities such as movement, depth, form, and colour in the prestriate areas. Much of his practical advice on the management of patients is still of value. Anyone concerned with brain injuries, especially of the occipital lobe, can still benefit from his contribution. Professor Zihl's translation makes this classic now available to a wider audience.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction
  • PART I: PATHOPSYCHOLOGICAL SYMPTOMATOLOGY: Visual field defects
  • The purely visual processes of apperception
  • Disturbances of the processes of meaningful visual identification and thinking
  • Optic apraxia
  • Disturbances of reading and writing
  • Recovery, training, assessment, overt complaints of visual disorder, and personality changes
  • PART II: CASE REPORTS OF 52 SELECTED PATIENTS, PRESENTED FROM THE CLINICAL POINT OF VIEW
  • References
  • Index.

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