This paper reports an investigation of the impaired writing of an acquired dysgraphic patient J.E.C. who made several case, substitution, omission, and addition errors when writing lower-case letters cursively, but whose upper-case writing was intact. The main finding was that damage to the lower-case letter production system results in errors that can be predicted from the spatial similarity of the lower-case form of the error to the lower-case form of the target. This was found with both within-case and cross-case letter substitutions. An additional observation was consistent cross-case errors occurred only with targets forming a single cluster of spatially similar lower-case letters (b, d, p, and q). It is concluded access to lower-case ...
Normally a neurological accident (stroke, head injury, degenerative processes, tumour) to the left h...
Dysgraphia due to a focal brain lesion can be characterized by substitution, transposition, deletion...
The neural bases of spelling impairments are still uncertain, as only a paucity of single-case studi...
Patients with peripheral dysgraphia due to impairment at the allographic level produce writing error...
We report a patient who, after a left parieto-occipital lesion, showed alexia and selective dysgraph...
SUMMARY A case of pure dysgraphia is presented in which the patient could accurately copy letters wh...
In this paper, we report a detailed analysis of the impaired performance of a dysgraphic individual,...
Two patients with acquired dysgraphia were reported. Thepatients ’ performance in various written a ...
peer reviewedIn this paper, we report a detailed analysis of the impaired performance of a dysgraphi...
We report on an Italian brain-damaged patient with impaired written spelling. The patient’s errors, ...
The letter substitution errors of 2 dysgraphic subjects who, despite relatively intact oral spelling...
This paper reports the case of an English speaking, fully left-handed patient (DS) with a left unila...
In tests of her ability to produce written and spoken language, this deep dyslexic patient produced ...
We describe a letter-by-letter patient who produced misreading errors in both letters in isolation a...
We report a detailed and extensive single-case study of an acquired dyslexic patient, L.H.D., who su...
Normally a neurological accident (stroke, head injury, degenerative processes, tumour) to the left h...
Dysgraphia due to a focal brain lesion can be characterized by substitution, transposition, deletion...
The neural bases of spelling impairments are still uncertain, as only a paucity of single-case studi...
Patients with peripheral dysgraphia due to impairment at the allographic level produce writing error...
We report a patient who, after a left parieto-occipital lesion, showed alexia and selective dysgraph...
SUMMARY A case of pure dysgraphia is presented in which the patient could accurately copy letters wh...
In this paper, we report a detailed analysis of the impaired performance of a dysgraphic individual,...
Two patients with acquired dysgraphia were reported. Thepatients ’ performance in various written a ...
peer reviewedIn this paper, we report a detailed analysis of the impaired performance of a dysgraphi...
We report on an Italian brain-damaged patient with impaired written spelling. The patient’s errors, ...
The letter substitution errors of 2 dysgraphic subjects who, despite relatively intact oral spelling...
This paper reports the case of an English speaking, fully left-handed patient (DS) with a left unila...
In tests of her ability to produce written and spoken language, this deep dyslexic patient produced ...
We describe a letter-by-letter patient who produced misreading errors in both letters in isolation a...
We report a detailed and extensive single-case study of an acquired dyslexic patient, L.H.D., who su...
Normally a neurological accident (stroke, head injury, degenerative processes, tumour) to the left h...
Dysgraphia due to a focal brain lesion can be characterized by substitution, transposition, deletion...
The neural bases of spelling impairments are still uncertain, as only a paucity of single-case studi...