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Chapter 18 Neuropsychology
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Perspectives and History
Definitions Study of relations between brain function and behavior Understanding, assessing, and treating Non-invasive study of brain function
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Perspectives and History
Roles of neuropsychologists Establish diagnoses Predictions on prognosis for recovery Interventions and rehabilitation Predict course of illness
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Perspectives and History
Theories of brain function 19th century: discovery of cortical areas Localization of function Belief that certain areas of the brain are related to certain functions First sign of this theory: Franz Gall and phrenology Bumps and indentations on skull account for individual differences Equipotentiality: cortex functions as a whole
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Perspectives and History
Functional Model Idea that the areas of the brain interact to produce behavior Nature of the behavioral deficit will depend on Which functional system has been affected The localization of damage within this functional system Reorganization Recovery from brain damage possible
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Perspectives and History
Neuropsychological assessment Began as simple testing for presence of brain damage Not much notice given to correlations between damage and associated functions Growth post World War II High patient numbers Rise of clinical psychology Development of test batteries
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The Brain Structure and function 2 hemispheres 4 lobes per hemisphere
Left: controls right side of body, controls language functions, logical inference, detail analysis Right: controls left side of body, controls visual-spatial skills, creativity, perception of direction, musicality 4 lobes per hemisphere Frontal: higher and executive functions Temporal: hearing, linguistic expression Parietal: tactile, kinesthetic, and spatial perception Occipital: vision
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The Brain
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The Brain Impairment Trauma Cerebrovascular accidents Concussions
Contusions Lacerations Cerebrovascular accidents Strokes Occlusions Can result in aphasia (language impairment), apraxia (inability to perform voluntary movements), and agnosia (disturbed sensory perception) Cerebral hemorrhage
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The Brain Impairment Tumors Degenerative diseases
Huntington’s Parkinson’s Alzheimer’s Nutritional deficiencies Toxic disorders Chronic alcohol abuse
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The Brain
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The Brain Consequences/symptoms of neurological damage
Impaired orientation Impaired memory Impaired intellectual functions Impaired judgment Shallow and labile affect Loss of emotional and mental resilience Frontal lobe syndrome
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The Brain Brain-Behavior Relationships
Lesions in different areas of the brain will produce different behavior deficits Damage effects Intellectual deterioration Decline from psychological factors Decline from injuries Difficult to detect without established baselines
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Methods of Neuropsychological Assessment
Major approaches Standard/ Fixed test battery Advantages All basic neuropsychological abilities Standard database creation over time Establishes patterns Disadvantages Time consuming and expensive Patient fatigue Inflexibility
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Methods of Neuropsychological Assessment
Major approaches Process/ flexible test battery Advantages Tailored to patient Alterable for hypothesis Disadvantages Clinician’s discretion/decisions Hampers systematic data collection
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Methods of Neuropsychological Assessment
Interpretation of results Context of normative data Difference scores Pathognomonic signs Pattern analysis Statistical formulas
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Methods of Neuropsychological Assessment
Neurodiagnostic procedures Neurological exams Spinal taps X-Rays Electroencephalographs (EEGs) CAT/ PET scans MRI
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Methods of Neuropsychological Assessment
Neurodiagnostic procedures Diagnose and locate damage or disease Not equally able to determine impairment Risk/ reward to each
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Methods of Neuropsychological Assessment
Cognitive functioning WAIS-IV Subtests: WAIS-R/ WAIS-R-NI Information Comprehension Vocabulary Abstract reasoning Similarities Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST)
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The Wisconsin Card Sorting Test
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Methods of Neuropsychological Assessment
Cognitive functioning Visual Perception Processing Rey-Osterrieth Complex Figure Test WAIS-IV Block design Judgment of the line orientation testing
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Rey-Osterrieth Complex Figure Test
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Judgment of Line Orientation Test
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Methods of Neuropsychological Assessment
Language functioning Word substitutions Impaired naming Luria-Nebraska Test Battery Receptive Speech Scale
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Methods of Neuropsychological Assessment
Memory Wechsler Memory Scale (WMS)-IV 5 index scores Auditory memory Visual memory Visual working memory Immediate memory Delayed memory Contrast scoring Benton Visual Retention test Rey-Osterrieth Complex Figure Test
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Methods of Neuropsychological Assessment
Test batteries Halstead-Reitan Battery Most widely used Compromised of 12 sections Information on probable localizations of lesions Advantages Probable localizations and gradual/ sudden onset Validity and reliability Disadvantages Length and cumbersome Neglect of some areas
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Methods of Neuropsychological Assessment
Luria-Nebraska Battery 269 tasks in 11 subtests Valid and reliable Agreement with Halstead-Reitan results Less than ½ the time of Halstead Limited because of standardization and rationale
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Methods of Neuropsychological Assessment
Variables that affect performance on tests Use of appropriate norms Handedness Premorbid ability: before brain injury Chronicity of condition Non-neurological conditions Motivational variables malingering
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Intervention and Rehabilitation
Nature of deterioration/ damage? Permanence of damage Rehabilitation Thorough assessment Maximum benefit of designed program Spontaneous relearning vs. re-teaching
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Intervention and Rehabilitation
Guides to re-learning Include the impaired skill Vary the difficulty of the task Task should be quantifiable Provide immediate feedback Control number of patient errors
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Training Training in Neuropsychology Requires specialty skills
Formally recognized by the APA Requires Generic psychological core Generic clinical core Neuroscience and neuropsychology Special clinical neuropsychology Real life training, clinicals, practicum
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