Neuropsychological Function and Brain Imaging
β Scribed by Erin D. Bigler, Ronald A. Yeo (auth.), Erin D. Bigler, Ronald A. Yeo Ph.D., Eric Turkheimer (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer US
- Year
- 1989
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 364
- Series
- Critical Issues in Neuropsychology
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Over the past two decades researchers and clinicians in the neurosciences have witnessed a literal information explosion in the area of brain imaging and neuropsychological functioning. Until recently we could not view the nervous system except through the use of invasive procedures. Today, a variety of imaging techniques are available, but this technology has advanced so rapidly that it has been difficult for new information to be consolidated into a single source. The goal of this volume is to present information on technological advances along with current standards and techniques in the area of brain imaging and neuropsychological functioning. The quality of brain imaging techniques has improved dramatically. In 1975 one had to be content with a brain image that only offered a gross distinction between ventricular cavities, brain, and bone tissue. Current imaging techniques offer considerable precision and approximate gross neuroanatomy to such an extent that differentiation between brain nuclei, pathways, and whiteΒ gray matter is possible. These technological advances have progressed so rapidly that basic and clinical research have lagged behind. It is not uncommon, particularly in longitudinal research, for the technical methΒ odology of a study to become obsolete while that study is still in progress. This has hampered certain aspects of systematic research and has also produced the need for a textbook that could address contemporary issues in brain imaging and neuropsychology.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xv
Neuropsychological Function and Brain Imaging....Pages 1-12
Neuroanatomy and Neuropathology....Pages 13-46
Techniques of Quantitative Measurement of Morphological Structures of the Central Nervous System....Pages 47-64
Positron Emission Tomography and Neuropsychological Function....Pages 65-138
Computed Tomographic Scanning and New Perspectives in Aphasia....Pages 139-159
Brain Imaging and Neuropsychological Outcome in Traumatic Brain Injury....Pages 161-183
Brain Imaging and Neuropsychological Identification of Dementia of the Alzheimerβs Type....Pages 185-218
Neuropsychological and Neuroanatomic Aspects of Complex Motor Control....Pages 219-244
Structural Brain Abnormalities in the Major Psychoses....Pages 245-268
Cerebral Imaging and Emotional Correlates....Pages 269-293
Individual Differences....Pages 295-316
Structural Anomalies and Neuropsychological Function....Pages 317-338
Neuropsychological Functioning and Brain Imaging....Pages 339-345
Back Matter....Pages 347-354
β¦ Subjects
Neurology; Neurosurgery; Neurosciences; Neuropsychology
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p>The present edition of this book is a revision and expansion of the first two editions which appeared in 1980 and 1985, and in German translation in 1991. More than half of the present volume includes new material, and what has been retained from the former editions has been largely rewritten and
This work consists of chapters on the progress of neuropsychological research written by recognised psychologists. They report on a broad range of topics, addressing basic and applied issues in the field. Empirical and theoretical advances in our knowledge of brain function are explored.
This text presents an integrated view of all of the latest techniques in functional neuroimaging (MRI, MRS, MSI and MEG), along with the fundamental knowledge of brain metabolism, haemodynamics and physiology. The established technologies for imaging and measuring the brain's properties (CT and MRI,