[Volume. 1]----------
CONTENTS
Acknowledgements = ⅸ
Chronological table of reprinted articles = xv
Introduction = 1
Section One : Modular Function
1. Rediscovery of Leborgne's Brain : Anatomical description with CT scan = 15
2. The return of Phineas Gage : Clues about the brain from the skull of a famous patient = 32
3. On aphasia = 42
4. Size vs intensity as a determinant of attention = 83
5. On "crossed" aphasia = 88
6. Dominant hemispherectomy : Preliminary report on neuropsychological sequelae = 106
7. A study of gnosis, praxis and language following section of the corpus callosum and anterior commissure = 111
8. Psychological defects produced by temporal lobe excision = 122
9. Obsercations on visual perception after disconnexion of the cerevreal hemispheres in man = 136
10. Disconnexion syndromes in animals and man = 153
Section Two : Perception
11. Disturbances of vision by cerebral lesions = 211
12. Partial cortical blindness with preservation of color vision = 244
13. Dissociation of visual perceptions due to occipital injuries, with especial reference to appreciation of movement = 253
14. elective disturbance of movement vision after bilateral brain amage = 292
15. Residual visual function after brain wounds involving the central visual pathways in man = 322
16. Lissauer on agnosia = 328
17. Visual apperceptive agnosia : A clinico-anatomical study of three cases = 361
18. Balint syndrome (psychic paralysis of visual fixation) and its minor forms = 382
19. Simultanagnosia = 412
20. A case of integrative visual agnosia = 445
21. Bodamer's (1947) paper on prosopagnosia = 479
22. Autonomic recognition of names and faces in prosopagnosia : A neuropsychological application of the guilty knowledge test = 501
23. Face recognition without awareness = 519
24. Capgras syndrome : A reduplicative phenomenon = 549
[Volume. 2]----------
CONTENTS
Section Three : Memory
25. On a case of sudden and isolated suppression of the mental vision of signs and objects (forms and colours) = 563
26. The neurological basis of mental imagery : A componential analysis = 573
27. S. S. Korsakoff's psychic disorder in conjunction with peripheral neuritis = 599
28. Location of lesions in Lorsakoff's syndrome : Neuropsychological and neuropathological data on two patients = 617
29. Observations during transient global amnesia = 643
30. Loss of recent memory after bilateral hippocampal lesions = 673
31. New method of testing long-term retention with special reference to amnesic patients = 694
32. Preserved learning and retention of pattern-analyzing skill in amnesia : Dissociation of knowing how and knowing that = 700
33. Towards a neurodynamic analysis of memory disturbances with lesions of the left temporal lobe = 708
34. Short-term memory impairment and spontaneous speech = 720
35. Fractionation of working memory : Neuropsychological evidence for a phonological short-term store = 729
Section Four : Object Knowledge
36. Perceptual and associative disorders of visual recognition = 747
37. An annotated translation of Lewandowsky (1908) = 761
38. Specific semantic word categories in aphasia = 773
39. The selective impairment of semantic memory = 787
40. Category specific impairments = 814
41. Evidence for modality-specific meaning systems in the brain = 843
42. Generating proper names : A case of selective inability = 848
43. A visual-speech disconnexion syndrome = 860
44. Spared naming without comprehension = 886
[Volume. 3]----------
CONTENTS
Section Five : Language
45. Neurology : Recent contributions in aphasia by C. Wernicke (1886) = 907
46. Introduction to Byrom Bramwell's (1897) case of word meaning deafness = 926
47. On aphasia and its relations to perception by Grashey (1885) = 939
48. Patterns of paralexia : a psycholinguistic approach = 966
49. Letter-by-letter reading : Psychological descriptions of a neurologial (sic) syndrome = 989
50. Lexical or orthographic agraphia = 1023
51. Color-naming defects in association with alexia = 1055
52. Syntactic and semantic errors in paralexia = 1070
53. Dissociation of algorithmic and heuristic processes in language comprehension : Evidence from aphasia = 1080
54. On the basis for the agrammatic's difficulty in producing main verbs = 1092
55. Cognitive processes in verbal-number production : Inferences from the performance of brain-damaged subjects = 1106
56. Dysprosody or altered "melody of language" = 1154
57. Left-hemisphere control of oral and brachial movements and their relation to communication = 1165
58. Biological foundations of language : Clues from sign langauge = 1183
[Volume. 4]----------
CONTENTS
Section Six : Motor Action and Space
59. Object vision and spatial vision : Two cortical pathways = 1209
60. Effects of parietal injury on covert orienting of attention = 1219
61. Visual disorientation with special reference to lesions of the right cerebral hemisphere = 1247
62. Mechanisms underlying hemispatial neglect = 1279
63. Unilateral neglect of representational space = 1289
64. Separate pathways for perception and action = 1294
65. Optic ataxia : A specific disruption in visuomotor mechanisms = 1307
66. Disorders of visual space associated with lesions of the right cerebral hemisphere = 1345
67. Ideational apraxia = 1374
Section Seven : Higher Mental Functions
68. From theory to practice : The unconventional contribution of Gottleib Burckhardt to psychosurgery = 1391
69. Differential behavioral effects in frontal lobe disease = 1409
70. "Utilization behaviour" and its relation to lesions of the frontal lobes = 1416
71. The involvement of the frontal lobes in cognitive estimation = 1437
72. The significance of the frontal lobes for mental performances = 1447
73. Preliminary analysis of grouping behavior in patients with cerebral injury by the method of equivalent and non-equivalent stimuli = 1462
74. A simple objective technique for measuring flexibility in thinking = 1492
75. Deficits in strategy application following frontal lobe damage in man = 1500
76. Willed action and the prefrontal cortex in man : A study with PET = 1521
Index = 1533