Literature DB >> 25527368

Italian neuropsychology in the second half of the twentieth century.

Giuseppe Vallar1, François Boller, Dario Grossi, Guido Gainotti.   

Abstract

Since the early 1960s, human neuropsychology, the study of brain-behavior interrelations, mainly based on the analysis of their pathological variations, brought about by brain damage, has had a remarkable systematical development in Italy. All this started in Milan, with the neurologist Ennio de Renzi, and his collaborators (Luigi Vignolo, then Anna Basso, Pietro Faglioni, Hans Spinnler, François Boller, and, more autonomously, Edoardo Bisiach), in the Clinic of Nervous and Mental Diseases. Scientists of the "Milan group" investigated several neuropsychological deficits caused by focal hemispheric lesions in large series of left- and right-brain-damaged patients, and control participants, comparable for cultural and demographic variables. Standardized tests and advanced statistical methods were used, which also applied to the diagnosis and rehabilitation of aphasia. Subsequently, neuropsychology developed in Italy extensively, reaching high international reputation. Leading neuropsychologists have been the neurologists Guido Gainotti (Rome), and Franco Denes (Padua), the physicians and psychologists Luigi Pizzamiglio (Rome), and Carlo Umiltà (Parma, with fruitful interactions with the neurophysiologists Giovanni Berlucchi, Giacomo Rizzolatti, and Carlo Marzi, from the school of Giuseppe Moruzzi in Pisa) A second scientific generation of neuropsychologists has then developed in the 1970s, trained by the abovementioned scientists, further boosting and spreading high-level basic and applied research (diagnosis and rehabilitation of neuropsychological deficits of patients with brain damage or dysfunction throughout the life span, from childhood to the elderly). Available techniques include structural and functional imaging (CT, PET, SPET, MRI and fMRI Scans, DTI), electrophysiological recording (EEG, ERPs), non-invasive brain stimulation (TMS, tES), and their combined use.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25527368     DOI: 10.1007/s10072-014-2044-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neurol Sci        ISSN: 1590-1874            Impact factor:   3.307


  56 in total

1.  Unilateral neglect of representational space.

Authors:  E Bisiach; C Luzzatti
Journal:  Cortex       Date:  1978-03       Impact factor: 4.027

2.  Direct evidence for a parietal-frontal pathway subserving spatial awareness in humans.

Authors:  Michel Thiebaut de Schotten; Marika Urbanski; Hugues Duffau; Emmanuelle Volle; Richard Lévy; Bruno Dubois; Paolo Bartolomeo
Journal:  Science       Date:  2005-09-30       Impact factor: 47.728

3.  The representation of compound headedness in the mental lexicon: a picture naming study in aphasia.

Authors:  Marco Marelli; Giusy Zonca; Antonella Contardi; Claudio Luzzatti
Journal:  Cogn Neuropsychol       Date:  2013-12-07       Impact factor: 2.468

4.  Happy 50th anniversary Cortex!

Authors:  Sergio Della Sala; Jordan Grafman
Journal:  Cortex       Date:  2013-11-06       Impact factor: 4.027

Review 5.  The body in the brain revisited.

Authors:  Giovanni Berlucchi; Salvatore M Aglioti
Journal:  Exp Brain Res       Date:  2009-08-19       Impact factor: 1.972

6.  Simple reaction times of ipsilateral and contralateral hand to lateralized visual stimuli.

Authors:  G Berlucchi; W Heron; R Hyman; G Rizzolatti; C Umiltà
Journal:  Brain       Date:  1971       Impact factor: 13.501

7.  An experimental investigation on the nature of extinction.

Authors:  G Di Pellegrino; E De Renzi
Journal:  Neuropsychologia       Date:  1995-02       Impact factor: 3.139

Review 8.  Neuroanatomical correlates of category-specific semantic disorders: a critical survey.

Authors:  G Gainotti; M C Silveri; A Daniele; L Giustolisi
Journal:  Memory       Date:  1995 Sep-Dec

9.  Brain and conscious representation of outside reality.

Authors:  E Bisiach; E Capitani; C Luzzatti; D Perani
Journal:  Neuropsychologia       Date:  1981       Impact factor: 3.139

10.  Modulation of conscious experience by peripheral sensory stimuli.

Authors:  G Bottini; E Paulesu; R Sterzi; E Warburton; R J Wise; G Vallar; R S Frackowiak; C D Frith
Journal:  Nature       Date:  1995-08-31       Impact factor: 49.962

View more
  1 in total

1.  Ennio De Renzi (1924-2014). A loving remembrance.

Authors:  François Boller
Journal:  Funct Neurol       Date:  2015 Jan-Mar
  1 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.