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Your search keyword '"Prosopagnosia etiology"' showing total 26 results

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26 results on '"Prosopagnosia etiology"'

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1. Acute Headache, Aphasia, and Prosopagnosia: Case Report in a Young Adult.

2. Non-dominant temporal lobe surgery: a case report of prosopagnosia following cavernous malformation resection.

3. Right Fusiform Gyrus Infarct with Acute Prosopagnosia.

4. Prosopamnesia: a case report of amnesia for faces.

5. Parosmia in Right-lateralized Semantic Variant Primary Progressive Aphasia: A Case Report.

6. Putative Alcohol-Related Dementia as an Early Manifestation of Right Temporal Variant of Frontotemporal Dementia.

7. [The "Tortoni effect" in prosopagnosia].

8. Prosopagnosia seizure semiology in a 10-year-old boy: a functional neuroimaging study.

10. Facing up to a problem with recognition.

12. The Anterior Temporal Lobes: New Frontiers Opened to Neuropsychological Research by Changes in Health Care and Disease Epidemiology.

13. Impaired Recognition of Emotional Faces after Stroke Involving Right Amygdala or Insula.

14. Incidental memory for faces in children with different genetic subtypes of Prader-Willi syndrome.

15. Developmental visual perception deficits with no indications of prosopagnosia in a child with abnormal eye movements.

16. Tumoral Presentation of Homonymous Hemianopia and Prosopagnosia in Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy-Related Inflammation.

17. Perceptual Learning of Faces: A Rehabilitative Study of Acquired Prosopagnosia.

18. Prosopagnosia Induced by a Left Anterior Temporal lobectomy Following a Right Temporo-occipital Resection in a Multicentric Diffuse Low-Grade Glioma.

19. Transient Prosopagnosia With Right Temporal Astrocytoma.

20. The woman who did not recognise her own face.

21. Prosopagnosia as the Presenting Symptom of Whipple Disease.

22. Impaired face detection may explain some but not all cases of developmental prosopagnosia.

23. Facial emotion recognition in patients with subjective cognitive decline and mild cognitive impairment.

24. Ventral simultanagnosia and prosopagnosia for unfamiliar faces due to a right posterior superior temporal sulcus and angular gyrus lesion.

25. Face inversion and acquired prosopagnosia reduce the size of the perceptual field of view.

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