Individuals who sustain a cerebrovascular accident (CVA) in the dominant (typically left) hemisphere, are at increased risk of developing motor skill deficits due to motor-sensory impairments, as well as cognitive impairments (e.g., apraxia). Clumsiness is a central component affecting motor skills in individuals with a left hemisphere CVA (LCVA). The term “clumsiness” however, has not been adequately operationalised in the apraxia literature in clinical terms, thereby making diagnosis difficult and its contribution to apraxic disorders uncertain. Accordingly, in this study “clumsiness” was explicitly defined by establishing a set of four criteria. The non-dominant (left) hand movements of three groups of participants were examined: 10 indi...
Limb apraxia is a syndrome often observed after stroke that affects the ability to perform skilled a...
Limb apraxia, a disorder of skilled action not consequent on primary motor or sensory deficits, has ...
Recent evidence in healthy participants suggests that a motor subcomponent of working memory (mWM) m...
Assessment of limb apraxia is still suffering from Liepmann’s legacy and perfor-mance in gesture-pro...
Limb apraxia (LA), is a neuropsychological syndrome characterized by difficulty in performing gestur...
Sixteen left-hemisphere stroke patients, who were apraxic or nonapraxic, and 17 control subjects per...
This thesis provides new insights about how the brain controls skilled movements, through the study ...
Objective: Limb apraxia is a motor cognitive disorder that has been mainly studied in patients with ...
Previous studies have shown that hand actions to visual objects are affected both by perceptual fact...
<div><p>ABSTRACT Limb apraxia is usually associated with left cerebral hemisphere damage, with numer...
Apraxia is characterised by multiple deficits of higher motor functions, primarily caused by left he...
Apraxia, a cognitive disorder of motor control, can severely impair transitive actions (objectrelate...
Memory-driven reaching and grasping movements were analysed in patients with left cerebral hemispher...
Previous studies showed that imitation of finger and hand/arm gestures could be differentially impai...
Limb apraxia is a syndrome often observed after stroke that affects the ability to perform skilled a...
Limb apraxia is a syndrome often observed after stroke that affects the ability to perform skilled a...
Limb apraxia, a disorder of skilled action not consequent on primary motor or sensory deficits, has ...
Recent evidence in healthy participants suggests that a motor subcomponent of working memory (mWM) m...
Assessment of limb apraxia is still suffering from Liepmann’s legacy and perfor-mance in gesture-pro...
Limb apraxia (LA), is a neuropsychological syndrome characterized by difficulty in performing gestur...
Sixteen left-hemisphere stroke patients, who were apraxic or nonapraxic, and 17 control subjects per...
This thesis provides new insights about how the brain controls skilled movements, through the study ...
Objective: Limb apraxia is a motor cognitive disorder that has been mainly studied in patients with ...
Previous studies have shown that hand actions to visual objects are affected both by perceptual fact...
<div><p>ABSTRACT Limb apraxia is usually associated with left cerebral hemisphere damage, with numer...
Apraxia is characterised by multiple deficits of higher motor functions, primarily caused by left he...
Apraxia, a cognitive disorder of motor control, can severely impair transitive actions (objectrelate...
Memory-driven reaching and grasping movements were analysed in patients with left cerebral hemispher...
Previous studies showed that imitation of finger and hand/arm gestures could be differentially impai...
Limb apraxia is a syndrome often observed after stroke that affects the ability to perform skilled a...
Limb apraxia is a syndrome often observed after stroke that affects the ability to perform skilled a...
Limb apraxia, a disorder of skilled action not consequent on primary motor or sensory deficits, has ...
Recent evidence in healthy participants suggests that a motor subcomponent of working memory (mWM) m...