About the Spanish film Agnos a film Infobox disease Name Agnosia ICD10 ICD10 R 48 1 r 47 ICD9 ICD9 784.69 ... Agnosia a gnosis , or loss of knowledge is a loss of ability to recognize objects, persons, sounds ... Approach, Roberts and Co., 2004, p.218 ref Alexithymia While not strictly a form of agnosia, Alexithymia may be difficult to distinguish from or co occur with social emotional agnosia. Alexithymia ... between body messages and emotions. ref Alexithymia ref Amusia or Receptive amusia Is agnosia ... but completely unable to perceive others. Apperceptive agnosia Patients are unable to distinguish ... visual stimuli. Unlike patients suffering from associative agnosia, those with apperceptive agnosia ... Types of Agnosias Bot generated title ref Apraxia Is a form of motor body agnosia involving .... Citation needed date December 2007 Associative agnosia Patients can describe visual scenes and classes ... you eat with but may mistake it for a spoon. Patients suffering from associative agnosia are still able to reproduce an image through copying. Auditory agnosia With Auditory Agnosia there is difficulty ... a 75zPzhtm Dorlands Medical Dictionary Bot generated title ref Color agnosia Refers ... agnosia Is the inability to distinguish the fingers on the hand. It is present in lesions of the dominant ... bin omd?finger agnosia Definition finger agnosia from Online Medical Dictionary Bot generated title ref Form agnosia Patients perceive only parts of details, not the whole object. Integrative agnosia ... VA Lab Visual 20Agnosias integrative.htm Integrative Agnosia Bot generated title ref Mirror agnosia ... VS, Altschuler EL, Hillyer S title Mirror agnosia journal Proc. Biol. Sci. volume 264 issue 1382 pages ... cgi pmidlookup?view long&pmid 9178535 ref Pain agnosia Also referred to as Analgesia ... as faceblindness and facial agnosia Patients cannot consciously recognize familiar faces, sometimes ... agnosia Those with this form of agnosia are effectively object blind until they use non visual sensory ... more details
Taxobox name Agnosia image image width 250px image caption regnum Animal ia phylum Arthropod a classis Insect a ordo Lepidoptera familia Sphingidae subfamilia Smerinthinae tribus genus Agnosia genus authority Lionel Walter Rothschild Rothschild & Heinrich Ernst Karl Jordan Jordan , 1903 range map range map width subdivision ranks Species subdivision See text. Agnosia is a genus of moth s in the Sphingidae family. Species Agnosia microta small Hampson 1907 small Agnosia orneus small Westwood 1847 small Category Smerinthini wikispecies Agnosia Sphingidae stub nl Agnosia vi Agnosia b m m ... more details
italic title Taxobox name Agnosia microta image image width 220px image caption regnum Animal ia phylum Arthropod a classis Insect a ordo Lepidoptera unranked superfamilia Macrolepidoptera superfamilia Bombycoidea familia Sphingidae genus Agnosia moth Agnosia species A. microta binomial Agnosia microta binomial authority Hampson, 1907 ref https www.cate sphingidae.org taxonomy Agnosia microta.html CATE Creating a Taxonomic eScience Sphingidae ref synonyms Marumba microta small Hampson, 1907 small Agnosia microta is a species of moth of the Sphingidae family. It is known from India . The wingspan is about 44 mm. The forewing upperside has a pale brown basal half and a generally darker distal half, with a rounded dark brown patch on the inner margin near the base. References Reflist Category Smerinthini Sphingidae stub vi Agnosia microta ... more details
italic title Taxobox name Agnosia microta image image width 220px image caption regnum Animal ia phylum Arthropod a classis Insect a ordo Lepidoptera unranked superfamilia Macrolepidoptera superfamilia Bombycoidea familia Sphingidae genus Agnosia moth Agnosia species A. microta binomial Agnosia microta binomial authority Hampson, 1907 ref https www.cate sphingidae.org taxonomy Agnosia microta.html CATE Creating a Taxonomic eScience Sphingidae ref synonyms Marumba microta small Hampson, 1907 small Agnosia microta is a species of moth of the Sphingidae family. It is known from India . The wingspan is about 44 mm. The forewing upperside has a pale brown basal half and a generally darker distal half, with a rounded dark brown patch on the inner margin near the base. References Reflist Category Smerinthini Sphingidae stub vi Agnosia orneus ... more details
Apperceptive Agnosia is the visual disorder that renders a person unable to recognize objects. It is also known as visual space agnosia . Distinction between shapes is difficult, although other aspects of Visual perception vision , such as ability to see detail and colour, remain intact. Recognition of, copying and discriminating between visual stimuli, even of different shapes, is problematic. Apperceptive agnosics cannot complete an object matching task. Because they are unable to recognize even simple shapes, Apperceptive agnosia is considered a problem in the early part of the visual processing system. As contrasted with patients diagnosed Associative agnosia , who are able to recognize simple shapes and even copy complex shapes drawing of an anchor, for example but are unable to recognize what an object is. In both cases, identification of objects is entirely based on inferences made by the person based on the colour, size, social, or contextual cues. A variant of apperceptive agnosia is the inability to recognize objects outside of their normal rotation or orientation. See also Agnosia Visual agnosia Associative agnosia References http www.psych.ucalgary.ca PACE VA Lab Visual 20Agnosias types 20of 20agnosias.html Further reading Fundamentals of Sensation and Perception , Michael Levine. Oxford University Press 3rd Edition . London, 2000. Visual Perception , Tom N. Cornsweet Tom Cornsweet . Harcourt Publishing, London, 1970. Eye pathology Category Diseases of the eye and adnexa Category Optometry Category Vision ... more details
Color agnosia from the Greek agn sia , ignorance or non knowledge , is a medical or psychological condition that prevents a person from correctly associate hue names with common objects. the sufferer retains the ability of distinguishing hues. It is a specific form of agnosia and generally results from damage to the visual cortex , often in V4 as opposed to most other kinds of color blindness, which stem from problems with the photoreceptor cell s . Notes Color agnosia is different than color anomia , a condition in which a person can distinguish between colors but cannot connect those colors to their names. Failure to investigate color agnosia may lead to late diagnosis of brain cancer. See also Achromatopsia Cerebral achromatopsia Visual agnosia External links cite journal author Damasio A, Yamada T, Damasio H, Corbett J, McKee J title Central achromatopsia behavioral, anatomic, and physiologic aspects journal Neurology volume 30 issue 10 pages 1064 71 year 1980 month October pmid 6968419 Category Neuropsychology Category Neurobiological brain disorder Eye stub el es Agnosia crom tica ... more details
Visual agnosia is the inability of the human eye brain to make sense of or make use of some part of otherwise normal visual stimulus and is typified by the inability to recognize familiar objects or faces. This is distinct from blindness , which is a lack of sensory input to the brain due to damage to the human eye eye , optic nerve , or primary visual systems in the brain such as the optic radiations or primary visual cortex. Visual agnosia is often due to damage, such as stroke , in the posterior occipital lobe occipital and or temporal lobe s in the brain. The specific symptoms can vary depending on the cause of the agnosia . Some sufferers are unable to copy drawings but are able to manipulate objects with good dexterity. ref http ahsmail.uwaterloo.ca kin356 ventral visual agnosia.htm Visual Agnosia A Disorder of the Ventral Stream , Student Web Pages, Department of Applied Health Sciences ... Agnosia , Stephen F. Austin State University ref Careful analysis of the nature of visual agnosia has ... may be considered symptoms of visual agnosia. Some of them are also regarded as subtypes ... types of visual agnosia are apperceptive and associative visual agnosia . Failure in high level object recognition despite normal visual perception vision is apperceptive visual agnosia. ref cite journal author Shelton PA, Bowers D, Duara R, Heilman KM title Apperceptive visual agnosia a case study ..., Freedman M, Moscovitch M title Associative prosop agnosia without apparent perceptual deficits a case ... visual agnosia is likely the result of disruption of connections between visual perception and verbal ... Events suffered from agnosia. A peculiar type of visual agnosia resulting from experimental brain ... is left with a bizarre form of visual agnosia that makes the world appear to him as warped , where non .... See also Agnosia Color agnosia Prosopagnosia Blindness Kl ver Bucy syndrome References reflist Farah ..., Mass., USA Blackwell Publishers , 2000. ISBN 0 631 21403 8. Category Neurological disorders Agnosia ... more details
Unreferenced date December 2009 People with associative agnosia fail in assigning meaning to an object, animal or building that they can see clearly. Most cases have injury to the Occipital lobe occipital and temporal lobe temporal lobes and the critical site of injury appears to be in the left occipital temporal region, often with involvement of the splenium of the corpus callosum . The clinical definition of the disorder is when an affected person is able to copy draw things that they cannot recognize. The disorder appears to be very uncommon in a pure or uncomplicated form and is usually accompanied by other complex neuropsychological problems such as impaired language or memory . The affected individual may not realize that they have a visual problem and may complain of becoming clumsy or muddled when performing familiar tasks such as setting the table or simple DIY. There has been debate about whether the fundamental problem in associative agnosia implicates Higher order visual perception perhaps in integrating the parts of an object into a structured whole A disconnection syndrome a failure of linking vision and perception with language Damage to a modality specific meaning process semantic system . Any or all of these interpretations may be appropriate for an individual patient but the same explanation will not necessarily work for all. Evidence in favor of the semantic hypothesis can be inferred from studies showing that affected people can often show partial knowledge of the things they cannot recognize such as knowing that an object is a container but not being able to determine whether it is a jug or a mug. They may also have difficulties in deciding whether two different visual forms visual synonyms are the same for example, they may be unable to determine that a wine glass and a tumbler are more alike than a tumbler and a vase. See also Agnosia Visual agnosia Apperceptive agnosia DEFAULTSORT Associative Agnosia Category Neurological disorders Agnosia nl ... more details
Auditory agnosia is a form of agnosia that manifests primarily in the inability to recognize or differentiate between sounds . It is not a defect of the ear, but a neurological inability of the brain to process what the sound means. Persons with auditory agnosia can physically hear the sounds and describe them using unrelated terms, but are unable to recognize them. They might describe the sound of some environmental sounds, such as a motor starting, as resembling a lion roaring, but would not be able to associate the sound with car or engine , nor would they say that it was a lion creating the noise. ref Human Neuropsychology. Neil Martin. Published by Prentice Hall, 2006. ISBN 0131974521, 9780131974524 ref Types of auditory agnosia There are three primary distinctions of auditory agnosia. Linguistic or verbal information or Wernicke s agnosia indicates that the subject can t comprehend words, although they can understand words using sign language and words from reading books, and are themselves capable of speech and even of deriving meaning from non linguistic communication e.g. body language ref The man who mistook his wife for a hat , Oliver Sacs ref the particular sounds associated to each word are meaningless. ref Neurolinguistics An Introduction to Spoken Language Processing and Its Disorders. John C. L. Ingram,. Austin, J. Bresnan, B. Comrie.Cambridge University Press, 2007.ISBN 0521791901, 9780521791908 ref Classical or pure auditory agnosia is an inability to process environmental sounds, such as animal noises, industrial noises, or the like. An airplane roaring overhead would not be understood to be related to the idea of airplane indeed, the person would not even think to look up. ref Clinical Neuropsychology. Kenneth M. Heilman, Edward Valenstein. Published by Oxford University Press US, 2003. ISBN 0195133676, 9780195133677 ref Interpretive or receptive agnosia ... Agnosia Aphasia Apraxia Notes references group nb Footnotes div class references small references ... more details
Integrative agnosia , as first defined by Riddoch and Humphreys 1987 , ref name Riddoch http pissaro.soc.huji.ac.il leon mivnim pdfs Riddoch 20stm 20in 20integartive 20agnosia.pdf ref is the disability to recognize objects due to the inability to group and integrate the component parts of the object into a coherent whole. ref name Gazzaniga Gazzaniga, Ivry & Mangun Cognitive Neuroscience , 2nd edition, 2002. ref Integrative agnosia is a subtype of associative agnosia . ref http www.unites.uqam.ca cnc psy7123 objectrecognition.pdf Microsoft PowerPoint objectrecognition Bot generated title ref Although the grouping of local elements into perceptual wholes can be impaired in integrative agnosia, patients can still be able to perceive holistic visual representations. For example, patients can respond in a relatively normal way to global compound letters. They can match stimuli based on low spatial frequency components of shape thick lines and gradual changes in color . Their identification of silhouettes can be at least as good as their identification of line drawings. ref name Riddoch br Patients can reproduce drawings of objects however, what they see is isolated, unconnected parts or contours. ref name Gazzaniga Riddoch and Humphreys proposed that patients could obtain global shape information from low spatial frequency components in the image and that this could contribute to performance in a variety of tasks. However, without integration from more local form elements, these global perceptual descriptions will be unelaborated. The patients don t have enough information to be able to accurately identify objects. Indeed, in many instances e.g., with line drawings , agnosic patients can use the local line elements to divide the object they see into different objects. This demonstrates their difficulties in integrating local elements with the global form information they have ... disorders Agnosia ... more details
Summary Film cover fur Article Agnos a film Use Infobox ADDITIONAL INFORMATION Name Agnosia Distributor Roxbury Pictures Publisher Filmax Type Official Poster Website Owner Telecinco Cinema Commentary OVERRIDE FIELDS Description Source The cover art can or could be obtained from http www.lashorasperdidas.com wp content uploads 2010 02 agnosia poster.jpg Las Horas Perdidas . Portion Low resolution Purpose Must be specified if Use is not Infobox Header Section Artist Replaceability other information Licensing Non free poster ... more details
Unreferenced stub auto yes date December 2009 Intermetamorphosis is a delusional misidentification syndrome , related to agnosia . The main symptom is that a patient confuses the identities of familiar people or feels that they are being mistaken for someone else. The disorder is usually Comorbidity comorbid with neurological disorder s or mental disorder s. An example from medical literature is a man who was diagnosed with Alzheimer s disease . After some time he mistook his wife for his deceased mother and later for his sister. As an explanation, he stated that he had never been married or that his wife had left him. Later he mistook his son for his brother and his daughter for another sister. Visual agnosia or prosopagnosia were not diagnosed, as the misidentification also took place during phone calls. On several occasions he mistook the hospital for the church he used to go to. The disorder was first described in 1932 by P. Courbon and J. Tusques Illusions d interm tamorphose et de la charme . Category Psychosis Category Delusional disorder Disease stub nl Intermetamorfose ... more details
Orphan date February 2009 Charcot Wilbrand Syndrome consists of visual agnosia and loss of ability to revisualize images. It can also be associated with Vascular occlusion occlusion of the posterior cerebral artery PCA of the dominant cerebral hemisphere . ref cite book last de Groot first J. title Correlative Neuroanatomy and Functional Neurology editor Joseph G. Chusid publisher Appleton & Lange location United States of America date 1986 pages 476 isbn 0870410148 language English ref References reflist med stub Category Neurological disorders de Charcot Wilbrand Syndrom ... more details
musical abilities Ayotte 2002 . Acquired music agnosia Definition The term agnosia refers to a loss of knowledge. Acquired music agnosia is the inability to recognize music in the absence of sensory, intellectual ... agnosia in a nonmusician 1996 . J Cogn Neuroscience 8 481 96 ref Music agnosia is most commonly ... M. A case of auditory agnosia with impairment of perception and expression of music cognitive processing ... deafness, auditory sound agnosia, and receptive amusia occur simultaneously, the state is called auditory agnosia Satoh 2007 . However, one must understand the subtle difference between auditory and music agnosia the former refers to the inability to recognize environmental sounds while the latter refers to the inability to recognize music. ref Vignolo L. Music agnosia and auditory agnosia 2003 ... agnosia range from the inability to recognize pitch, rhythm, chords, and notes to the inability ... mentioned the main causes for music agnosia are lesions in the right or bilateral temporal ... more details
Infobox Disease Name Astereognosis Image Caption DiseasesDB ICD10 ICD9 ICD9 780.99 ICDO OMIM MedlinePlus eMedicineSubj eMedicineTopic MeshID Astereognosis is the inability to identify an object by touch without visual input. As opposed to agnosia , when the object is observed visually, one should be able to successfully identify the object. Astereognosis is associated with lesions of the parietal lobe or dorsal column . ref name urlSensory Normal cite web url http library.med.utah.edu neurologicexam html sensory normal.html title Sensory Normal format work accessdate ref See also Stereognosis References reflist Speech and voice symptoms and signs Lesions of spinal cord and brain medicine stub nl Astereognosis Category Neurological disorders ... more details
Charcot may refer to Jean Martin Charcot French neurologist Charcot s name is associated with many diseases and conditions including Charcot s artery lenticulostriate artery Neuropathic joint disease Charcot s joint diabetic arthropathy Charcot s disease amyotrophic lateral sclerosis , the most common subtype of motor neurone disease also known as Lou Gehrig s disease. Charcot Marie Tooth disease peroneal muscular atrophy Charcot Wilbrand syndrome visual agnosia and loss of ability to revisualise images Charcot s intermittent hepatic fever intermittent pain, intermittent fever, intermittent jaundice, and loss of weight Charcot Bouchard aneurysm s tiny aneurysms of the penetrating branches of middle cerebral artery in hypertensives Charcot s triad Charcot arthropathy Charcot Leyden crystals due to eosinophils white blood cells lysis in cases of allergic diseases. Jean Baptiste Charcot French explorer and physician, son of Jean Martin Charcot. Charcot Island an island of Antarctica named by Jean Baptiste Charcot disambig de Charcot fr Charcot ro Charcot dezambiguizare sv Charcot olika betydelser ... more details
agnosia loss of ability to identify objects based on touch agnosia astereognosia. Temporal lobe ... visual agnosia s, i.e. inability to recognize familiar objects, colors, or prosopagnosia faces ... more details
Martha Farah is a cognitive neuroscience researcher at the University of Pennsylvania . She has worked on an unusually wide range of topics the citation for her lifetime achievement award from the Association for Psychological Science states that Her studies on the topics of mental imagery, face recognition, semantic memory, reading, attention, and executive functioning have become classics in the field. Farah has undergraduate degrees in Metallurgy and Philosophy from MIT, and a doctorate in Psychology from Harvard University. She has taught at Carnegie Mellon University and at the University of Pennsylvania, where she is now Walter H. Annenberg Professor of Natural Sciences and Director of the Center for Neuroscience & Society. Early work Farah s early work focused on the neural bases of vision and memory. In her 1990 book, Visual Agnosia Disorders of Object Recognition and What They Tell Us about Normal Vision MIT Press , she framed many of the questions about visual recognition that the next two decades of cognitive neuroscience research addressed. These questions include whether the human brain uses a general purpose pattern recognition system for all classes of visual object or whether there is specialization for face recognition and or printed word recognition, and whether semantic memory knowledge is organized in the brain by category e.g., living vs nonliving things or modality e.g. visual vs motoric information . Her research revealed a striking degree of division of labor, with specialized systems for a various categories of stimuli and types of information, and was summarized in The Cognitive Neuroscience of Vision Wiley Blackwell, 2000 and in the second edition of Visual Agnosia MIT Press, 2004 . Farah was also among the first information processing psychologists to use the behavior of neurological patients to test cognitive theories, starting in the early 1980 s. At this time, cognition was understood by analogy with computers mind is to brain as softw ... more details
Infobox Disease Name Central hearing loss Image Caption DiseasesDB ICD10 ICD9 ICDO OMIM MedlinePlus eMedicineSubj eMedicineTopic MeshID D006313 Central hearing loss is a form of sensorineural hearing loss caused by damage to the Auditory system auditory pathways . When the damage is to the primary auditory cortex , the impairment is called cortical deafness . Cortical deafness Cortical deafness is essentially the combination of word deafness and auditory agnosia. It is characterized by an inability to interpret either verbal or nonverbal sounds with preserved awareness of the occurrence of sound as for instance by a startle reaction to a clap. In most instances, the cause is bilateral embolic stroke to the area of Heschl s gyri. It usually results from bilateral lesions and happens when remaining normal auditory cortex is destroyed. It begins as a sudden deafness, which evolves into a picture where patients can hear sounds but are unable to recognize their meaning. Relatively few cases of this disorder have been studied. Note that this syndrome might be difficult to distinguish from a brainstem lesion such as described above. Mendez and Geehan have reviewed this syndrome 1988 . The black areas on the scan above are strokes in the temporal lobes of both sides. External links http www.dizziness and balance.com disorders hearing cent hearing.html Overview at dizziness and balance com cite journal author Hood L, Berlin C, Allen P title Cortical deafness a longitudinal study. journal J Am Acad Audiol volume 5 issue 5 pages 330 42 year 1994 pmid 7987023 Diseases of the ear and mastoid process http www.dizziness and balance.com disorders hearing cent hearing.html Category Deafness disease stub ... more details
Orphan date August 2010 Zasetsky born c. 1920 is the pseudonym of a patient who was treated by Russia n neuropsychologist A. R. Luria Alexander Luria . Zasetsky suffered a severe Acquired brain injury brain injury , losing his ability to read, write, and speak retrieving desired words was particularly difficult , and suffering impaired vision, memory, and other functions. He was notable for the tenacity and to some extent, success with which he fought to regain a normal life, and for what the pattern of his deficits helped cognitive scientists to learn about brain function . He also wrote a journal of his experience, which itself was extraordinarily difficult for him. He was 23 years old when injured in the Battle of Smolensk on March 2, 1943. A bullet entered his left Parietal lobe parieto Occipital lobe occipital area, and resulted in a long coma . Following this he developed a form of agnosia and became unable to perceive the right side of things. Objects he did see often appeared as fragmented pieces rather than whole objects. Even the right side of his own body was invisible to him, an experience that remained terrifying even years later. Luria, who treated Zasetsky over the course of 26 years, published Zasetsky s journal and a detailed case history in The Man with a Shattered World The History of a Brain Wound, translated by Lynn Solotaroff Cambridge Harvard University Press reprint , 2004 . ISBN 0674546253 ISBN 978 0674546257. See also Solomon Shereshevskii Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH Category Neurotrauma Category People with brain injuries Category People with severe brain damage Category 1920 births Category Living people nl Zasetsky ... more details
Hermann Wilbrand May 22, 1851 &ndash 1935 was a German ophthalmologist born in Giessen . Wilbrand s father and grandfather were also physicians. In 1875 he earned his doctorate at the University of Strassburg , and afterwards was an assistant to Ludwig Laqueur 1839 1909 at Strassburg and to Carl Friedrich Richard F rster 1825 1902 at Breslau . Later he moved to Hamburg , where he became head of the Department of Ophthalmology at Allgemeines Hospital in 1905. Wilbrand specialized in the field of neuro ophthalmology and did extensive research involving the pathology and physiology of the eye. He demonstrated that homonymous hemianopsia was caused by lesions in the occipital lobe and optic radiation as well as the optic tract . Associated eponyms Wilbrand s knee A group of macula extramacular ganglion cell axon s that extend forward into the posterior optic nerve . Charcot Wilbrand syndrome Syndrome involving visual agnosia and the inability to re visualize images. Condition due to occlusion of the posterior cerebrum cerebral artery of the dominant hemisphere. Named with French neurologist Jean Martin Charcot 1825 1893 . Written works Die hemianopischen Gesichtsfeldformen und das optische Wahrnehmungscentrum . Wiesbaden, 1890. ber Sehst rungen bei funktionellen Nervenleiden . with Alfred Saenger 1860 1921 Leipzig, 1892. Die Erhohlungsausdehnung des Gesichtsfeldes . Wiesbaden, 1896 . ber die Augenerkrankungen in der Fr hperiode der Syphilis . with Staelin. Hamburg and Leipzig, 1897. Die Neurologie des Auges ein Handbuch f r Nerven und Augen rtze . with Alfred Saenger 9 volumes . Wiesbaden, 1900 1922. Die Theorie des Sehens . with Carl Behr 1876 1943 supplementary volume, 1927 , Wiesbaden, 1913. Der Faservelauf durch das Chiasma und die intrakraniellen Sehnerven . Berlin, 1929. References http www.mrcophth.com ophthalmologyhalloffame wilbrand.html Ophthalmology Hall of Fame biography of Hermann Wilbrand Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Wilbrand, Herm ... more details
Heinrich Lissauer September 12, 1861 September 21, 1891 was a Germany German neurologist who was born in Neidenburg today Nidzica , Poland . He studied at the Universities of University of Heidelberg Heidelberg , University of Berlin Berlin and University of Leipzig Leipzig . He was a neurologist at the psychiatric hospital in Breslau , and was a one time assistant to Carl Wernicke . He was the son of archaeologist Abraham Lissauer 1832 1908 . Lissauer is known for his description of the posterolateral tract of the spinal cord which was to become known as Lissauer s tract . Another eponymous term associated with Lissauer is Lissauer s paralysis , which is an apoplexy apoplectic type of general paresis . He also published an influential treatise on visual agnosia , which was called Seelenblindheit in 19th century German medicine, and it roughly translates to soul blindness . Lissauer died in Hallstatt , Austria on September 21, 1891 at the age of 30. Written works Beitrag zum Faserverlauf im Hinterhorn des menschlichen R ckenmarks und zum Verhalten desselben bei Tabes Dorsalis Ein Fall von Seelenblindheit, nebst einem Beitrag zur Theorie derselben . In Archiv fur Psychiatrie und. Nervenkrankheiten, Jg. 21 1890 , S. 222 270. Sehh gelver nderungen bei progressiver Paralyse . In Deutsche Medizinische Wochenschrift, Jg. 16 1890 . References This article is based on a translation of an article from the German Wikipedia . http www.whonamedit.com doctor.cfm 3279.html Heinrich Lissauer Who Named It Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Lissauer, Heinrich ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH September 12, 1861 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH September 21, 1891 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Lissauer, Heinrich Category 1861 births Category 1891 deaths Category German neurologists Category People from the Province of Prussia de Heinrich Lissauer pl Heinrich Lissauer ... more details