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41. Similar cortical correlates underlie
$7.95
42. The impact of colour, spatial
$7.95
43. Computation of tactile object
$71.96
44. The Study of Anosognosia
45. Case Studies in the Neuropsychology
 
$114.99
46. The Neuropsychology of High-level
$36.71
47. Fredy Neptune
$69.51
48. A Coursebook on Aphasia and Other
 
49. Metamemory in Parkinson's Disease

41. Similar cortical correlates underlie visual object identification and orientation judgment [An article from: Neuropsychologia]
by C.F. Altmann, W. Grodd, Z. Kourtzi, H.H. Bulthoff
Digital: Pages (2005-01)
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Asin: B000RR4SMW
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This digital document is a journal article from Neuropsychologia, published by Elsevier in 2005. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Description:
Visual object perception has been suggested to follow two different routes in the human brain: a ventral, view-invariant occipital-temporal route processes object identity, whereas a dorsal, view-dependent occipital-parietal route processes spatial properties of an object. Using fMRI, we addressed the question whether these routes are exclusively involved in either object recognition or spatial representation. We presented subjects with images of natural objects and involved them either in object identification or object orientation judgment task. For both tasks, we observed activation in ventro-temporal as well as parietal areas bilaterally, with significantly stronger responses for the orientation judgment in both ventro-temporal as well as parietal areas. Our findings suggest that object identification and orientation judgment do not follow strictly separable cortical pathways, but rather involve both the dorsal and the ventral stream. ... Read more


42. The impact of colour, spatial resolution, and presentation speed on category naming [An article from: Brain and Cognition]
by K.R. Laws, M.Z. Hunter
Digital: Pages (2006-11-01)
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Asin: B000PAUTVU
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This digital document is a journal article from Brain and Cognition, published by Elsevier in 2006. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Description:
Studies of neurological patients with category-specific agnosia have provided important contributions to our understanding of object recognition, although the meaning of such disorders is still hotly debated. One crucial line of research for our understanding of category effects, is through the examination of category biases in healthy normal subjects. This approach has, however, led to contradictory findings with advantages both for natural kinds and for man-made things being documented in healthy subjects. It has been proposed that task conditions may influence the direction of advantage (Gerlach, 2001) and in particular, that sub-optimal viewing conditions underpin natural kinds advantages, while man-made advantages emerge under more optimal viewing conditions. In two experiments with normal subjects, we examined the roles played by spatial resolution (blurring), stimulus type (colour and texture), and speed of presentation in picture naming across category. In both experiments, healthy subjects showed a natural kind advantage for original stimuli and for blurred colour stimuli (at slow and fast presentation speeds), while an advantage for man-made things emerged for line-drawings that were blurred and presented slowly. The implications for category-specific object recognition deficits are discussed. ... Read more


43. Computation of tactile object properties requires the integrity of praxic skills [An article from: Neuropsychologia]
by S.J. Crutch, J.D. Warren, L. Harding, Warrington
Digital: Pages (2005-01)
list price: US$7.95 -- used & new: US$7.95
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Asin: B000RR4TXK
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Editorial Review

Product Description
This digital document is a journal article from Neuropsychologia, published by Elsevier in 2005. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Description:
We describe a series of experiments to examine the tactile identification of objects over the course of neurological recovery in a patient with an intracerebral haemorrhage involving the left inferior and superior parietal lobe. Tactile agnosia in this case involved the ipsilesional as well as the contralesional hand, allowing us to observe the effects of dominant parietal lobe damage without the confounding effects of hemiparesis. The findings demonstrate that both apraxia and tactile apperceptive agnosia may result from a unilateral lesion involving the left parietal lobe. The findings further suggest that the computation of macro-geometrical and micro-geometrical tactile object properties is dissociable. Macro-geometrical tactile analysis depends on intact programming of exploratory hand movements, while the role of such movements in micro-geometrical analysis is less clear. ... Read more


44. The Study of Anosognosia
by GeorgeP. Prigatano
Hardcover: 560 Pages (2010-04-21)
list price: US$89.95 -- used & new: US$71.96
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Asin: 0195379098
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The study of anosognosia has witnessed an unprecedented increase in interest over the last 20 years.This has resulted in numerous empirical investigations as well as theoretical writings on the nature of human consciousness and how disorders of the brain may influence the person's subjective awareness of a disturbed neurological or neuropsychological function.This edited text summarizes many of the advances that have taken place in the field of anosognosia.It reviews research findings on anosognosia for hemiplegia following stroke, Anton's syndrome, and a variety of disorders in which impaired self-awareness is common.It also provides suggestive guidelines for the management and rehabilitation of persons who have anosognosia or impaired self-awareness. ... Read more


45. Case Studies in the Neuropsychology of Vision
Hardcover: 224 Pages (1999-11-01)
list price: US$95.00
Isbn: 086377895X
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"One important means to understanding normal cognitive functions is the study of the breakdown of these functions following brain damage. Within the field of vision, case studies of patients with selective deficits have helped develop our understanding of how basic properties of images are processed (colour, motion), how such properties are integrated in perception, and how perceptual processes relate to recognition and imagery. This book provides reviews of major case studies dealing with the breakdown of visual perception and recognition, with the case studies being discussed in the light of studies that have followed since. The chapters provide a context in which the contributions of the case studies can be evaluated. The case studies include the disorders: motion vision, colour vision, perceptual integration, perceptual classification, recognition of particular categories of object, semantic access from vision (in optic aphasia), and recognition impairments with relative sparing of imagery."--BOOK JACKET. ... Read more


46. The Neuropsychology of High-level Vision: Collected Tutorial Essays (Carnegie Mellon Symposia on Cognition Series)
 Hardcover: 400 Pages (1994-05-01)
list price: US$115.00 -- used & new: US$114.99
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Asin: 0805809104
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This book provides a state-of-the-art review of high-level vision and the brain. Topics covered include object representation and recognition, category-specific visual knowledge, perceptual processes in reading, top-down processes in vision -- including attention and mental imagery -- and the relations between vision and conscious awareness. Each chapter includes a tutorial overview emphasizing the current state of knowledge and outstanding theoretical issues in the authors' area of research, along with a more in-depth report of an illustrative research project in the same area.

The editors and contributors to this volume are among the most respected figures in the field of neuropsychology and perception, making the work presented here a standard-setting text and reference in that area.
... Read more


47. Fredy Neptune
by Les A. Murray
Paperback: 264 Pages (1998-06-26)
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Asin: 1857543378
Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
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Tells the story of Fred Boettcher, a German-Australian whom we first meet as a sailor in World War I. This work spans both World Wars, the Crash of 1929 and the Great Depression. Leprosy, massacre, and race all feature in this modern myth, as world events are balanced with family and friendships.Amazon.com Review
Despite laudable efforts by Vikram Seth and Anne Carson, the novel inverse isn't exactly a fashionable genre. It seems to promise readers aripping good yarn, only to bog them down in slant rhymes, enjambments, andother linguistic niceties. Yet even the staunchest fiction fans may find ithard to resist the charms of Les Murray's Fredy Neptune. For onething, the hero--an Australian itinerant named Friedrich Boettcher--engages in the sort of adventures that are usually reserved forhis opposite numbers in prose. Fredy fights aboard a German battleshipduring World War I, witnesses several of the worst slaughters of ourcentury, and journeys from the Holy Land to Africa to America to the FarEast before making a final landfall back in Australia. But Murray'seight-line stanzas are also eminently readable: slangy, swift, andjam-packed with narrative propulsion.

Fredy Neptune isn't, it should be said, a mere action movie inverse. After our hero witnesses the genocidal slaughter of some Armenianwomen, he undergoes a sympathetic reaction that would perplex the likes ofIndiana Jones:

I was burning in my clothes, sticking to them and ripping free again
shedding like a gum tree, and having to hide it and work.
What I never expected, when I did stop hurting
I wouldn't feel at all. But that's what happened.
No pain, nor pleasure. Only a ghost of that sense
that tells where the parts of you are....
Detached from human feeling, endowed with superhuman strength, Fredycontinues his odyssey, which takes him through so many of the era'spremiere trouble spots. At one point he fetches up in Hollywood, serving as"an extra just then for the famous Prussian director / who I thoughtsounded Australian, when he wasn't talking English." And there heencounters poetry-loving vamp Marlene Dietrich, who sells him once and forall on the merits of Rilke's "The Panther": "It sat me up. This wasn't theTurk's or Thoroblood's 'poems', / big, dangerous, baggy. This was the graindistilled. / This was the sort that might not get men killed." Murray's ownpoem is too discursive, perhaps, to match Rilke's 86-proof lyricism. Butit's plenty big and dangerous, and even in its baggiest moments, FredyNeptune remains an exhilarating read. --Bob Brandeis ... Read more

Customer Reviews (8)

5-0 out of 5 stars Moby Dicked
It's tough out there. Don't be fooled; given the chance, our fellow man is a brute with a night stick. Les Murray paints a Hobbesian world and takes the reader on a global ride to prove his point. It begins in Turkey with the sight of women being burned alive and ends in Dresden and Hiroshima. The killing and cruelty never end. Man's senses are geared to sniffing out outsiders and making them sorry they ventured outside their allotted doghouse. At the end of Fredy's odyssey through the twentieth century's killing machine, which includes Europe, America and Asia, we learn that the exploitation of man by man is the only universal worth talking about. Stalinism, Hitlerism and other isms of liberation are just cover for atrocity-making at the hands of goons in the employ of the state. Fredy learns and simultaneously teaches the lessons of the century. It's always better to stay home. This novel in verse is Homeric in every sense of the word; the writing is superb. Murray has all the tools of the English language well in hand; his is a Shakespearean talent, equal to best novelists of our time, with the added genius of the poet. Compression is the key; in the hands of the magical realists this would be a 3000 page, 10-volume monster of unreadable prose. One is dazzled not only by the verbal dexterity and wit, but one basks in the glow of wisdom. Fredy is never taken in by the century's cant; his is an Orwellian cast of mind, always on the alert for words that justify killing. His is a moral conscience equal to our greatest poets: Dante, Goethe, and Shakespeare. What is evil, he asks? He can't say, but he knows it when he sees it.

4-0 out of 5 stars Novel in verse is appealing
Writing a novel in verse is a diffidult task. I've been reading a few lately and there seem to be a few ways to go about it.One way to do it is embodied by Golden Gate, by Vikram Seth which is modeled on Eugene Onegin by Pushkin. Both novels have an emphatic style, clear rhyming pattern, iambic tetrameter that allows the story to bounce along. This is a very satisfying and energetic read, but the repetitive patterns will become wearing for a lot of readers, particularly those who are not familiar with reading exteneded verse. (but then the words "novel in verse" should act as some sort of warning for you. Hard to complain when that's printed on the cover)

The other way to approach it is to follow the more "vers libre" route, where the sense of poetry is more framed by a "poetic mindset" than by outside structure.I think of Catherine Cookson or of History:The Home Movie which become oblique,idiosyncratic - the story becomes a poem because of its sketchiness, its odd imagery, its refusal to be story driven.

Fredy Neptune is somewhere between the two.The regular 8 line stanzas give a sense of structure, the pounding metrical stresses drive home the sense of poetry, the now-you-see-it-now-you-don't rhyming structures and alliterations provide odd satisfactions of their own, that remind you occassionally that you are reading poetry, without ever getting precious, distracting or boring.

The story is of a man who witnesses a world war one atrocity and who becomes physically numb. At first he seems to be a leper, but after a time he becomes a superman, possessed of increased strength and healing abilities. This allegorical condition (the numbness of being removed from one's own life feels like something I've experienced) allows him to follow life as a numb husband and father, emotionally touched by people, but not properly feeling his own responses to life and situations.He occassionally comes back into the world as a feeling person, before slilpping away again into wooden nervelessness.

It's an engaging and constantly evolving story, sometimes emotionally disturbing, sometimes frustrating in terms of the obstacles that life throws up for the hero.There were a few times, paritcularly at the beginning where I drifted off and lost the story, but that's often a danger of verse, which is prone to sometimes draw attention to its sounds more than its sense. Still, the novel is possessed of good energetic diction which can be a real pleasure to reread.

If you do end up reading and liking it, I would recommend also Tiepolo's Hound byDerek Walcott (sp?) and Puskin's Eugene Onegin. Also Orlando Furioso by Ludovico Arriosto.Tiepolo's hound is kind of difficult to follow at points, but it is a work of genious,. perhaps more of an extended narrative poem than a novel in verse. Orlando Furioso is a page turner, both an example of romantic chivalry and a satire of it.Onegin is funny, insightful and engaging.These three books are work of genius. If you ask me.

Which you didn't.

5-0 out of 5 stars Imaginative Epic - 20th Century "Hero"
Les Murray has created an unusual "everyman" hero, Fredy Neptune, whose adventures are linked to significant geographies, events, and themes of the last century.He's anything but the "ordinary" sailor we first meet, and subsequently is often perceived to possess superhuman powers.Murray has succeeded in making an epic in verse that's delightfully entertaining, poetic in its language, and completely engaging.If you are put off by the thought of reading a novel in verse, don't be.It's a richly rewarding work that you will greatly enjoy.
For those of you who'd like to read a much more detailed review, I suggest Ruth Padel's from the New York Times which you can find using most search engines.

5-0 out of 5 stars Odyssean Myth for the Twentieth Century
`Fredy Neptune' is a rare thing. It is one of the great democratic novels of the twentieth century, paralleling `Ulysses' in its sense of the ordinary and reverence for the everyday. And like Joyce's masterpiece, it is Homeric in its sense of suffering, exile and homecoming.Yet the homecoming, in `Fredy Neptune', is more psychological and existential than geographical.

The main character, a German Australian sailor witnesses the murder of a group of Armenian women during the Turkish genocide of 1915. He suffers profound moral shock and loses all sense of feeling, both bodily and psychologically. After rescuing a Jewish man and a handicapped boy from Hitler's racial hygiene program, Fredy stumbles across an idea that will heal his fragmented condition; he must `forgive the victim'. Why? This is Murray's response to current ethical imperatives. He can only heal himself, can only return from the traumatic seas of psychic dissociation, if he comes to terms with the voice of conscience. Fredy forgives the victims of history, who include Jews, women and Aborigines, for they linger like a moral irritant in his mind. Once he has forgiven them he begins to `pray with a whole heart' and the process of re-integration with his body begins.

Readers interested in Murray's other poetry will find 'Fredy Neptune' is resonant with his collection of autobiographical poetry `Killing the Black Dog', which also contains a revealing essay by the author. The parallels between `Fredy Neptune' and Murray's personal history are illuminating. `Fredy Neptune' is arguably one of the major works of 20c poetry.

5-0 out of 5 stars the man with blank senses
This is an odd book; even down to its dimensions.
It's taller than average...a good thing if you plan to travel with it.I dunno, some things just carry easier.

As for the content, all I can say is it sometimes carries the same tune as Bukowski in his rare "sensitive" moments, when the ugly monster disappears and is replaced by something far more palatable.I bought the book at a bookstore blowout, when all that was left were Road Atlas's, How To books and posters of various 'has beens' and 'what-nots'.

There it was, completely ignored on the shelf, and probably because as the title suggests, it's completely in verse.
It's not in rhyming verse though, which is a plus for those of us who are annoyed by musicals and slant rhymes.

One bit of irony is that while the book is about a man who has lost his ability to "feel", both literally and figuratively in some cases, it is extremely sensuous and is able to condense into one verse what a regular novel would take pages to resolve.

The book is dark, gritty and you can smell the stink of the various docks and ship holds and whores our hero meets on his travels.

Hell, I'm raving about it and I haven't even finished it yet.I take it with me while I'm sucking down coffee, and there are various markings and underlinings and cheap tea stains all over it; I suspect that I will destroy this book before I reach the final page, which is fine, because I really don't want it to end, which sounds rather childish, even sophomoric.

Whatever.

I'll be searching for more of Murray's work.I would give you a verse but it wouldn't do the whole any justice whatsover.
It sings like "The Man Without Qualities", and in fact has alot in common with that book.They just "feel" the same.I know, Bukowski, Musil?There's more, but I don't want to risk anymore comparisons.

Email me if you have nothing better to do with your time, and think you want to wrestle with idiots.

Jose[f] Olivo ... Read more


48. A Coursebook on Aphasia and Other Neurogenic Language Disorders
by M.N. Hegde
Spiral-bound: 352 Pages (2005-12-14)
list price: US$80.95 -- used & new: US$69.51
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Asin: 1418037362
Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars
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This excellent new edition of a highly respected text provides clear, essential information on aphasia and other neurogenic language disorders in a user-friendly format. Organized in the coursebook format, pages are divided into columns with written information side by side with space for notes, allowing you to keep all your information in one, easy to access location. Thorough revisions reflect recent developments in the field including expanded information on dementia, traumatic brain injury, and right hemisphere syndrome. Current and clinically relevant, additional information on the study, assessment, and treatment of language disorders associated with neurologic problems has been included making this an essential and practical resource. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (1)

4-0 out of 5 stars Book for college: good find
I found this item to be a good investment and it was very much like the describtion. ... Read more


49. Metamemory in Parkinson's Disease
by Lynn DellaPietra
 Unknown Binding: Pages (1995)

Asin: B0006PHNTA
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