DOCSLIB.ORG
Explore
Sign Up
Log In
Upload
Search
Home
» Tags
» Allochiria
Allochiria
Dissociation Between Awareness and Spatial Coding: Evidence from Unilateral Neglect
Spatial Stroop with Directional Cues
Abadie's Sign Abadie's Sign Is the Absence Or Diminution of Pain Sensation When Exerting Deep Pressure on the Achilles Tendo
Deficits in Response Space Following Unilateral Striatal Dopamine Depletion in the Rat
Reference of Sensation at the Spinal Level by P
Body Awareness Disorders: Dissociations Between Body-Related Visual and Somatosensory Information Laure Pisella, Laurence Havé, Yves Rossetti
Functional Sensory Symptoms
Coding of Spatial Lnformation in the with Neglect Following Parietal Lobe
A Dictionary of Neurological Signs.Pdf
Peripersonal Space: a Multisensory Interface for Body-Objects Interactions
Synesthesia: Phenomenology and Neuropsychology a Review of Current Knowledge
Reflex Neurogenic Inflammation I
Della Sala, S 2012, 'Dissociation Between Awareness and Spatial Coding: Evidence from Unilateral Neglect', Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, Vol
ALLOCHIRIA.1 Hysteria, and Is of No Value in Diagnosis." How Inexact Is This Account of the Condition Will Be Seen Presently
Somatosensory Cortex in Tactile Awareness
Visuo-Spatial Neglect
A Right Anterior Parietotemporal Syndrome 431
Segmental, Axonal, and Demyelinative Lesions in the Trigeminal System Produce Neuropathic Pain
Top View
False Localising Signs a J Larner
Pediatric Neurology Briefs 2009 15
Seizure-Induced Neglect
Spatial Neglect
Unilateral Neglect: Assessment and Rehabilitation
Visual Allesthesia in a Patient with Glioblastoma Multiforme
Beri-Beri in China Force
Long-Term Changes in Purposive and Reflexive Responses to Nociceptive Stimulation Following Anterolateral Chordotomy
Bilateral Representations of Touch in the Primary Somatosensory Cortex
The Interaction of Spatial Reference Frames and Hierarchical Object Representations: Evidence from Figure Copying in Hemispatial Neglect
A Conceptual Model of Tactile Processing Across Body Features of Size, Shape, Side, and Spatial Location