Publication |
Sentence |
Publish Date |
Extraction Date |
Species |
Guido Gainott. Is Anosognosia for Left-Sided Hemiplegia Due to a Specific Self-Awareness Defect or to a Poorly Conscious Working Mode Typical of the Right Hemisphere? Behavioral sciences (Basel, Switzerland). vol 13. issue 12. 2023-12-22. PMID:38131820. |
this review aimed to evaluate whether the association between 'anosognosia for hemiplegia' and lesions of the right hemisphere points to a special self-awareness role of the right side of the brain, or could instead be due to a working mode typical of the right hemisphere. |
2023-12-22 |
2023-12-24 |
human |
Guido Gainott. Is Anosognosia for Left-Sided Hemiplegia Due to a Specific Self-Awareness Defect or to a Poorly Conscious Working Mode Typical of the Right Hemisphere? Behavioral sciences (Basel, Switzerland). vol 13. issue 12. 2023-12-22. PMID:38131820. |
is anosognosia for left-sided hemiplegia due to a specific self-awareness defect or to a poorly conscious working mode typical of the right hemisphere? |
2023-12-22 |
2023-12-24 |
human |
Guido Gainott. Is Anosognosia for Left-Sided Hemiplegia Due to a Specific Self-Awareness Defect or to a Poorly Conscious Working Mode Typical of the Right Hemisphere? Behavioral sciences (Basel, Switzerland). vol 13. issue 12. 2023-12-22. PMID:38131820. |
data consistent with the first alternative would support the existence of a specific link between anosognosia for hemiplegia and self-awareness, whereas data supporting the second option would confirm the model linking anosognosia to a poorly conscious working mode typical of the right hemisphere. |
2023-12-22 |
2023-12-24 |
human |
Andy Wai Kan Yeun. Neural correlates of food labels on brand, nature, and nutrition: An fMRI meta-analysis. Frontiers in nutrition. vol 9. 2023-01-06. PMID:36606226. |
results for the meta-analysis on food nutrition revealed that the precuneus on the right hemisphere was significantly activated, a brain region related to internal mentation of self-consciousness and nutritional evaluation. |
2023-01-06 |
2023-08-14 |
human |
Louise P Kirsch, Christoph Mathys, Christina Papadaki, Penelope Talelli, Karl Friston, Valentina Moro, Aikaterini Fotopoulo. Updating beliefs beyond the here-and-now: the counter-factual self in anosognosia for hemiplegia. Brain communications. vol 3. issue 2. 2021-11-17. PMID:34151264. |
the syndrome of anosognosia for hemiplegia, or the lack of awareness for one's paralysis following right hemisphere stroke, can provide unique insights into the neurocognitive mechanisms of self-awareness. |
2021-11-17 |
2023-08-13 |
Not clear |
Brick Johnstone, Daniel Cohen, Andrew Denniso. The integration of sensations and mental experiences into a unified experience: A neuropsychological model for the "sense of self". Neuropsychologia. vol 159. 2021-08-13. PMID:34237328. |
this article proposes a model that suggests that the right hemisphere association area integrates physical sensations and mental experiences into a unified experience (i.e., a "sense of self") that is best conceptualized and understood as the subjective experience of "mineness." |
2021-08-13 |
2023-08-13 |
human |
Brick Johnstone, Aimee Kvandal, Robin Winslow, Jocelyn Kilgore, Melissa Guerr. The behavioral presentation of an individual with a disordered sense of self. Brain injury. vol 34. issue 3. 2021-07-02. PMID:31977238. |
this case demonstrates clinically relevant information regarding how individuals with a reduced "sense of self" (i.e., "mineness") associated with a right hemisphere tbi may report their subjective experiences and perform on objective testing. |
2021-07-02 |
2023-08-13 |
Not clear |
Brick Johnstone, Aimee Kvandal, Robin Winslow, Jocelyn Kilgore, Melissa Guerr. The behavioral presentation of an individual with a disordered sense of self. Brain injury. vol 34. issue 3. 2021-07-02. PMID:31977238. |
there is increased recognition that the brain processes a "sense of self" (best understood as a sense of "mineness") in the right hemisphere association area and which can be distorted due to neurologic injury. |
2021-07-02 |
2023-08-13 |
Not clear |
Montserrat G Delgado, Julien Bogousslavsk. Misoplegia. Frontiers of neurology and neuroscience. vol 41. 2018-07-24. PMID:29145180. |
misoplegia is one of the passionate syndromes of the still "not-enough well-known" self-awareness syndromes of the right hemisphere, which shows how brain damage goes much further beyond neurological deficit. |
2018-07-24 |
2023-08-13 |
Not clear |
Alain Mori. The "self-awareness-anosognosia" paradox explained: How can one process be associated with activation of, and damage to, opposite sides of the brain? Laterality. vol 22. issue 1. 2017-02-03. PMID:27093371. |
it is proposed that (1) anosognosia does not actually result from uniquely right hemisphere damage; (2) self-awareness and anosognosia do not constitute unitary concepts and encompass multiple other related processes, most likely associated with activity in distinct anatomical networks; and (3) impaired awareness of deficit is mostly caused by problems with self-monitoring, pre-/post-brain damage comparisons of performance, and episodic memory, and is more passive, unintentional, and about the body. |
2017-02-03 |
2023-08-13 |
human |
Alain Mori. The "self-awareness-anosognosia" paradox explained: How can one process be associated with activation of, and damage to, opposite sides of the brain? Laterality. vol 22. issue 1. 2017-02-03. PMID:27093371. |
furthermore, the claim that healthy self-awareness is located in the right hemisphere because anosognosia results from damage to this side of the brain must be fallacious. |
2017-02-03 |
2023-08-13 |
human |
Kevin Guise, Karen Kelly, Jennifer Romanowski, Kai Vogeley, Steven M Platek, Elizabeth Murray, Julian Paul Keena. The Anatomical and Evolutionary Relationship between Self-awareness and Theory of Mind. Human nature (Hawthorne, N.Y.). vol 18. issue 2. 2015-07-21. PMID:26181846. |
these data suggest that self-awareness may have evolved in concert with other right hemisphere cognitive abilities. |
2015-07-21 |
2023-08-13 |
Not clear |
Alain Mori. Self-recognition, theory-of-mind, and self-awareness: what side are you on? Laterality. vol 16. issue 3. 2011-08-12. PMID:21049317. |
in cognitive neuroscience, an increasingly popular position holds that the right hemisphere represents the centre of self-awareness because msr and tom tasks presumably increase activity in that hemisphere. |
2011-08-12 |
2023-08-12 |
Not clear |
Julian P Keenan, Jennifer Rubio, Connie Racioppi, Amanda Johnson, Allyson Barnac. The right hemisphere and the dark side of consciousness. Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior. vol 41. issue 5. 2005-12-08. PMID:16209332. |
in attempting to localize these abilities, it appears that regions of the right hemisphere including fronto-temporal regions are capable of sustaining a sense of self-awareness. |
2005-12-08 |
2023-08-12 |
Not clear |