Oxford Textbook of Cognitive Neurology and Dementia
Herausgeber: Schott, Jonathan M.; Husain, Masud
Oxford Textbook of Cognitive Neurology and Dementia
Herausgeber: Schott, Jonathan M.; Husain, Masud
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Now in paperback, this text covers the dramatic developments that have occurred in basic neuroscience and clinical research in cognitive neurology and dementia. The text is based on the clinical approach to the patient, and provides essential knowledge that is fundamental to clinical practice.
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Now in paperback, this text covers the dramatic developments that have occurred in basic neuroscience and clinical research in cognitive neurology and dementia. The text is based on the clinical approach to the patient, and provides essential knowledge that is fundamental to clinical practice.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Oxford Textbooks in Clinical Neurology
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 512
- Erscheinungstermin: 29. Oktober 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 268mm x 216mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 1358g
- ISBN-13: 9780198831082
- ISBN-10: 0198831080
- Artikelnr.: 53919827
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Oxford Textbooks in Clinical Neurology
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 512
- Erscheinungstermin: 29. Oktober 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 268mm x 216mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 1358g
- ISBN-13: 9780198831082
- ISBN-10: 0198831080
- Artikelnr.: 53919827
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Masud Husain is Professor of Neurology & Cognitive Neuroscience at the Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Oxford, UK. He read Physiological Sciences/Medicine (1981-84) at Oxford before completing his PhD in 1987. He held a Harkness Fellowship and was a postdoctoral fellow at MIT, prior to returning to Oxford to finish his clinical degree. After Neurology training in London, he held a joint appointment as Consultant Neurologist and Wellcome Trust Senior Fellow (2000-12). In 2013, he was awarded a Principal Fellowship by The Wellcome Trust and moved to Oxford where he is a Professorial Fellow at New College. Previously he was Professor of Clinical Neurology at UCL & The National Hospital for Neurology & Neurosurgery, London and Deputy Director of the UCL Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience. Jonathan M. Schott is Professor of Neurology, at the Dementia Research Centre, Department of Neurodegenerative Diseases, UCL Institute of Neurology, UK. He was awarded a First Class BSc in Basic Medical Sciences with Physiology (Imperial College, 1993), gained Honours (in surgery) at medical finals, and was awarded the Malcolm Morris Memorial Prize (1996). Jonathan joined the Dementia Research Centre (DRC), Institute of Neurology (2001-5), where he was awarded his MD (UCL, 2004), for investigation of the role of serial magnetic resonance imaging as a tool for tracking the progressions of Alzheimer's disease (AD) and in aiding diagnosis. After completing his clinical training, he rejoined the DRC as HEFCE/NHS Senior Lecturer/Honorary Consultant at the Institute of Neurology, UCL (2009 - ).
* Section 1: Normal cognitive function
* 1: Charles Gross: Historical aspects of neurology
* 2: Giovanna Zamboni: Functional specialisation and network
connectivity in brain function
* 3: Teresa Torralva, Ezequiel Gleichgerrcht, Agustin Ibañez, and
Facundo Manes: The frontal lobes
* 4: Morgan D. Barense, Jason D. Warren, Timothy J. Bussey, and Lisa M.
Saksida: The temporal lobes
* 5: Masud Husain: Parietal cortex
* 6: Geraint Rees: The human occipital lobe
* 7: James Rowe and Timothy Rittman: The basal ganglia in cognitive
disorders
* 8: Marco Catani: Principles of white matter organization
* 9: Trevor W. Robbins: Neurochemistry of cognition
* Section 2: Cognitive dysfunction
* 10: Seyed A Sajjadi and Peter J. Nestor: Bedside assessment of
cognition
* 11: Diana Caine and Sebastian Crutch: Neuropsychological assessment
* 12: Dalia Abou Zeky and Argye E. Hillis: Acquired disorders of
language and speech
* 13: Lara Harris, Kate Humphreys, Ellen M. Migo, and Michael D.
Kopelman: Memory disorders
* 14: Anna Katharina Schaadt and Georg Kerkhoff: Vision and visual
processing deficits
* 15: Paolo Bartolomeo and Raffaella Migliaccio: Disorders of
attentional processes
* 16: Georg Goldenberg: Apraxia
* 17: Marinella Cappelletti: The neuropsychology of acquired
calculation disorders
* 18: Alexander P. Leff: Disorders of reading and writing
* 19: Dylan Wint and Jeffrey Cummings: Neuropsychiatric aspects of
cognitive impairment
* Section 3: Cognitive impairment and dementia
* 20: Thais Minett and Carol Brayne: Epidemiology of dementias
* 21: Jonathan M. Schott, Nick C. Fox, and Martin N. Rossor: Assessment
and investigation of the cognitively impaired adult
* 22: Barbara C. van Munster, Sophia de Rooij, and Sharon K. Inouye:
Delirium, drugs, toxins
* 23: Sam Nightingale, Benedict Daniel Michael, and Tom Solomon: CNS
infections
* 24: Nicholas J. C. Smith and Timothy M. Cox: Metabolic dementia
* 25: Geert Jan Biessels and Philip Scheltens: Vascular cognitive
impairment
* 26: Sergi Martinez-Ramirez, Steven M. Greenberg, and Anand
Viswanathan: Cerebral amyloid angiopathy and CNS vasculitis
* 27: Maria A. Ron: CNS inflammatory causes: Multiple sclerosis
* 28: Sarosh R. Irani, Thomas D. Miller, and Angela Vincent: CNS
inflammatory causes: Autoimmune encephalitis
* 29: Tamas Revesz, Tammaryn Lashley, and Janice L. Holton: Pathology
of degenerative dementias
* 30: Rita Guerreiro and Jose Bras: Genetics of degenerative dementias
* 31: Davina J. Hensman Moss, Nicholas W. Wood, and Sarah J. Tabrizi:
Other genetic causes of cognitive impairment
* 32: Bruno Dubois and Olga Uspenskaya: Changing concepts and new
definitions for Alzheimer's disease
* 33: Susan Rountree and Rachelle S. Doody: Presentation and Management
of Alzheimer's disease
* 34: Jonathan D. Rohrer and Jason D. Warren: Primary progressive
aphasia
* 35: Bruce Miller and Soo Jin Yoon: Frontotemporal dementia
* 36: Hasmet A. Hanagasi, Basar Bilgiç, and Murat Emre: Dementia with
lewy bodies and Parkinson's disease dementia
* 37: Elizabeth A. Coon and Keith A. Josephs: Corticobasal
degeneration, progressive supranuclear palsy, multiple system
atrophy, argyrophilic grain disease and rarer neurodegenerative
diseases
* 38: Simon Mead, Peter Rudge, and John Collinge: Prion diseases
* 39: David J. Sharp, Simon Fleminger, and Jane Powell: Traumatic brain
injury (TBI)
* 40: Tom Foltynie and Ludvic Zrinzo: Neurosurgery for cognitive
disorders
* 41: Philip D. Harvey: Cognition in severe mental illness:
Schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and depression
* Section 1: Normal cognitive function
* 1: Charles Gross: Historical aspects of neurology
* 2: Giovanna Zamboni: Functional specialisation and network
connectivity in brain function
* 3: Teresa Torralva, Ezequiel Gleichgerrcht, Agustin Ibañez, and
Facundo Manes: The frontal lobes
* 4: Morgan D. Barense, Jason D. Warren, Timothy J. Bussey, and Lisa M.
Saksida: The temporal lobes
* 5: Masud Husain: Parietal cortex
* 6: Geraint Rees: The human occipital lobe
* 7: James Rowe and Timothy Rittman: The basal ganglia in cognitive
disorders
* 8: Marco Catani: Principles of white matter organization
* 9: Trevor W. Robbins: Neurochemistry of cognition
* Section 2: Cognitive dysfunction
* 10: Seyed A Sajjadi and Peter J. Nestor: Bedside assessment of
cognition
* 11: Diana Caine and Sebastian Crutch: Neuropsychological assessment
* 12: Dalia Abou Zeky and Argye E. Hillis: Acquired disorders of
language and speech
* 13: Lara Harris, Kate Humphreys, Ellen M. Migo, and Michael D.
Kopelman: Memory disorders
* 14: Anna Katharina Schaadt and Georg Kerkhoff: Vision and visual
processing deficits
* 15: Paolo Bartolomeo and Raffaella Migliaccio: Disorders of
attentional processes
* 16: Georg Goldenberg: Apraxia
* 17: Marinella Cappelletti: The neuropsychology of acquired
calculation disorders
* 18: Alexander P. Leff: Disorders of reading and writing
* 19: Dylan Wint and Jeffrey Cummings: Neuropsychiatric aspects of
cognitive impairment
* Section 3: Cognitive impairment and dementia
* 20: Thais Minett and Carol Brayne: Epidemiology of dementias
* 21: Jonathan M. Schott, Nick C. Fox, and Martin N. Rossor: Assessment
and investigation of the cognitively impaired adult
* 22: Barbara C. van Munster, Sophia de Rooij, and Sharon K. Inouye:
Delirium, drugs, toxins
* 23: Sam Nightingale, Benedict Daniel Michael, and Tom Solomon: CNS
infections
* 24: Nicholas J. C. Smith and Timothy M. Cox: Metabolic dementia
* 25: Geert Jan Biessels and Philip Scheltens: Vascular cognitive
impairment
* 26: Sergi Martinez-Ramirez, Steven M. Greenberg, and Anand
Viswanathan: Cerebral amyloid angiopathy and CNS vasculitis
* 27: Maria A. Ron: CNS inflammatory causes: Multiple sclerosis
* 28: Sarosh R. Irani, Thomas D. Miller, and Angela Vincent: CNS
inflammatory causes: Autoimmune encephalitis
* 29: Tamas Revesz, Tammaryn Lashley, and Janice L. Holton: Pathology
of degenerative dementias
* 30: Rita Guerreiro and Jose Bras: Genetics of degenerative dementias
* 31: Davina J. Hensman Moss, Nicholas W. Wood, and Sarah J. Tabrizi:
Other genetic causes of cognitive impairment
* 32: Bruno Dubois and Olga Uspenskaya: Changing concepts and new
definitions for Alzheimer's disease
* 33: Susan Rountree and Rachelle S. Doody: Presentation and Management
of Alzheimer's disease
* 34: Jonathan D. Rohrer and Jason D. Warren: Primary progressive
aphasia
* 35: Bruce Miller and Soo Jin Yoon: Frontotemporal dementia
* 36: Hasmet A. Hanagasi, Basar Bilgiç, and Murat Emre: Dementia with
lewy bodies and Parkinson's disease dementia
* 37: Elizabeth A. Coon and Keith A. Josephs: Corticobasal
degeneration, progressive supranuclear palsy, multiple system
atrophy, argyrophilic grain disease and rarer neurodegenerative
diseases
* 38: Simon Mead, Peter Rudge, and John Collinge: Prion diseases
* 39: David J. Sharp, Simon Fleminger, and Jane Powell: Traumatic brain
injury (TBI)
* 40: Tom Foltynie and Ludvic Zrinzo: Neurosurgery for cognitive
disorders
* 41: Philip D. Harvey: Cognition in severe mental illness:
Schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and depression
* 1: Charles Gross: Historical aspects of neurology
* 2: Giovanna Zamboni: Functional specialisation and network
connectivity in brain function
* 3: Teresa Torralva, Ezequiel Gleichgerrcht, Agustin Ibañez, and
Facundo Manes: The frontal lobes
* 4: Morgan D. Barense, Jason D. Warren, Timothy J. Bussey, and Lisa M.
Saksida: The temporal lobes
* 5: Masud Husain: Parietal cortex
* 6: Geraint Rees: The human occipital lobe
* 7: James Rowe and Timothy Rittman: The basal ganglia in cognitive
disorders
* 8: Marco Catani: Principles of white matter organization
* 9: Trevor W. Robbins: Neurochemistry of cognition
* Section 2: Cognitive dysfunction
* 10: Seyed A Sajjadi and Peter J. Nestor: Bedside assessment of
cognition
* 11: Diana Caine and Sebastian Crutch: Neuropsychological assessment
* 12: Dalia Abou Zeky and Argye E. Hillis: Acquired disorders of
language and speech
* 13: Lara Harris, Kate Humphreys, Ellen M. Migo, and Michael D.
Kopelman: Memory disorders
* 14: Anna Katharina Schaadt and Georg Kerkhoff: Vision and visual
processing deficits
* 15: Paolo Bartolomeo and Raffaella Migliaccio: Disorders of
attentional processes
* 16: Georg Goldenberg: Apraxia
* 17: Marinella Cappelletti: The neuropsychology of acquired
calculation disorders
* 18: Alexander P. Leff: Disorders of reading and writing
* 19: Dylan Wint and Jeffrey Cummings: Neuropsychiatric aspects of
cognitive impairment
* Section 3: Cognitive impairment and dementia
* 20: Thais Minett and Carol Brayne: Epidemiology of dementias
* 21: Jonathan M. Schott, Nick C. Fox, and Martin N. Rossor: Assessment
and investigation of the cognitively impaired adult
* 22: Barbara C. van Munster, Sophia de Rooij, and Sharon K. Inouye:
Delirium, drugs, toxins
* 23: Sam Nightingale, Benedict Daniel Michael, and Tom Solomon: CNS
infections
* 24: Nicholas J. C. Smith and Timothy M. Cox: Metabolic dementia
* 25: Geert Jan Biessels and Philip Scheltens: Vascular cognitive
impairment
* 26: Sergi Martinez-Ramirez, Steven M. Greenberg, and Anand
Viswanathan: Cerebral amyloid angiopathy and CNS vasculitis
* 27: Maria A. Ron: CNS inflammatory causes: Multiple sclerosis
* 28: Sarosh R. Irani, Thomas D. Miller, and Angela Vincent: CNS
inflammatory causes: Autoimmune encephalitis
* 29: Tamas Revesz, Tammaryn Lashley, and Janice L. Holton: Pathology
of degenerative dementias
* 30: Rita Guerreiro and Jose Bras: Genetics of degenerative dementias
* 31: Davina J. Hensman Moss, Nicholas W. Wood, and Sarah J. Tabrizi:
Other genetic causes of cognitive impairment
* 32: Bruno Dubois and Olga Uspenskaya: Changing concepts and new
definitions for Alzheimer's disease
* 33: Susan Rountree and Rachelle S. Doody: Presentation and Management
of Alzheimer's disease
* 34: Jonathan D. Rohrer and Jason D. Warren: Primary progressive
aphasia
* 35: Bruce Miller and Soo Jin Yoon: Frontotemporal dementia
* 36: Hasmet A. Hanagasi, Basar Bilgiç, and Murat Emre: Dementia with
lewy bodies and Parkinson's disease dementia
* 37: Elizabeth A. Coon and Keith A. Josephs: Corticobasal
degeneration, progressive supranuclear palsy, multiple system
atrophy, argyrophilic grain disease and rarer neurodegenerative
diseases
* 38: Simon Mead, Peter Rudge, and John Collinge: Prion diseases
* 39: David J. Sharp, Simon Fleminger, and Jane Powell: Traumatic brain
injury (TBI)
* 40: Tom Foltynie and Ludvic Zrinzo: Neurosurgery for cognitive
disorders
* 41: Philip D. Harvey: Cognition in severe mental illness:
Schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and depression
* Section 1: Normal cognitive function
* 1: Charles Gross: Historical aspects of neurology
* 2: Giovanna Zamboni: Functional specialisation and network
connectivity in brain function
* 3: Teresa Torralva, Ezequiel Gleichgerrcht, Agustin Ibañez, and
Facundo Manes: The frontal lobes
* 4: Morgan D. Barense, Jason D. Warren, Timothy J. Bussey, and Lisa M.
Saksida: The temporal lobes
* 5: Masud Husain: Parietal cortex
* 6: Geraint Rees: The human occipital lobe
* 7: James Rowe and Timothy Rittman: The basal ganglia in cognitive
disorders
* 8: Marco Catani: Principles of white matter organization
* 9: Trevor W. Robbins: Neurochemistry of cognition
* Section 2: Cognitive dysfunction
* 10: Seyed A Sajjadi and Peter J. Nestor: Bedside assessment of
cognition
* 11: Diana Caine and Sebastian Crutch: Neuropsychological assessment
* 12: Dalia Abou Zeky and Argye E. Hillis: Acquired disorders of
language and speech
* 13: Lara Harris, Kate Humphreys, Ellen M. Migo, and Michael D.
Kopelman: Memory disorders
* 14: Anna Katharina Schaadt and Georg Kerkhoff: Vision and visual
processing deficits
* 15: Paolo Bartolomeo and Raffaella Migliaccio: Disorders of
attentional processes
* 16: Georg Goldenberg: Apraxia
* 17: Marinella Cappelletti: The neuropsychology of acquired
calculation disorders
* 18: Alexander P. Leff: Disorders of reading and writing
* 19: Dylan Wint and Jeffrey Cummings: Neuropsychiatric aspects of
cognitive impairment
* Section 3: Cognitive impairment and dementia
* 20: Thais Minett and Carol Brayne: Epidemiology of dementias
* 21: Jonathan M. Schott, Nick C. Fox, and Martin N. Rossor: Assessment
and investigation of the cognitively impaired adult
* 22: Barbara C. van Munster, Sophia de Rooij, and Sharon K. Inouye:
Delirium, drugs, toxins
* 23: Sam Nightingale, Benedict Daniel Michael, and Tom Solomon: CNS
infections
* 24: Nicholas J. C. Smith and Timothy M. Cox: Metabolic dementia
* 25: Geert Jan Biessels and Philip Scheltens: Vascular cognitive
impairment
* 26: Sergi Martinez-Ramirez, Steven M. Greenberg, and Anand
Viswanathan: Cerebral amyloid angiopathy and CNS vasculitis
* 27: Maria A. Ron: CNS inflammatory causes: Multiple sclerosis
* 28: Sarosh R. Irani, Thomas D. Miller, and Angela Vincent: CNS
inflammatory causes: Autoimmune encephalitis
* 29: Tamas Revesz, Tammaryn Lashley, and Janice L. Holton: Pathology
of degenerative dementias
* 30: Rita Guerreiro and Jose Bras: Genetics of degenerative dementias
* 31: Davina J. Hensman Moss, Nicholas W. Wood, and Sarah J. Tabrizi:
Other genetic causes of cognitive impairment
* 32: Bruno Dubois and Olga Uspenskaya: Changing concepts and new
definitions for Alzheimer's disease
* 33: Susan Rountree and Rachelle S. Doody: Presentation and Management
of Alzheimer's disease
* 34: Jonathan D. Rohrer and Jason D. Warren: Primary progressive
aphasia
* 35: Bruce Miller and Soo Jin Yoon: Frontotemporal dementia
* 36: Hasmet A. Hanagasi, Basar Bilgiç, and Murat Emre: Dementia with
lewy bodies and Parkinson's disease dementia
* 37: Elizabeth A. Coon and Keith A. Josephs: Corticobasal
degeneration, progressive supranuclear palsy, multiple system
atrophy, argyrophilic grain disease and rarer neurodegenerative
diseases
* 38: Simon Mead, Peter Rudge, and John Collinge: Prion diseases
* 39: David J. Sharp, Simon Fleminger, and Jane Powell: Traumatic brain
injury (TBI)
* 40: Tom Foltynie and Ludvic Zrinzo: Neurosurgery for cognitive
disorders
* 41: Philip D. Harvey: Cognition in severe mental illness:
Schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and depression
* Section 1: Normal cognitive function
* 1: Charles Gross: Historical aspects of neurology
* 2: Giovanna Zamboni: Functional specialisation and network
connectivity in brain function
* 3: Teresa Torralva, Ezequiel Gleichgerrcht, Agustin Ibañez, and
Facundo Manes: The frontal lobes
* 4: Morgan D. Barense, Jason D. Warren, Timothy J. Bussey, and Lisa M.
Saksida: The temporal lobes
* 5: Masud Husain: Parietal cortex
* 6: Geraint Rees: The human occipital lobe
* 7: James Rowe and Timothy Rittman: The basal ganglia in cognitive
disorders
* 8: Marco Catani: Principles of white matter organization
* 9: Trevor W. Robbins: Neurochemistry of cognition
* Section 2: Cognitive dysfunction
* 10: Seyed A Sajjadi and Peter J. Nestor: Bedside assessment of
cognition
* 11: Diana Caine and Sebastian Crutch: Neuropsychological assessment
* 12: Dalia Abou Zeky and Argye E. Hillis: Acquired disorders of
language and speech
* 13: Lara Harris, Kate Humphreys, Ellen M. Migo, and Michael D.
Kopelman: Memory disorders
* 14: Anna Katharina Schaadt and Georg Kerkhoff: Vision and visual
processing deficits
* 15: Paolo Bartolomeo and Raffaella Migliaccio: Disorders of
attentional processes
* 16: Georg Goldenberg: Apraxia
* 17: Marinella Cappelletti: The neuropsychology of acquired
calculation disorders
* 18: Alexander P. Leff: Disorders of reading and writing
* 19: Dylan Wint and Jeffrey Cummings: Neuropsychiatric aspects of
cognitive impairment
* Section 3: Cognitive impairment and dementia
* 20: Thais Minett and Carol Brayne: Epidemiology of dementias
* 21: Jonathan M. Schott, Nick C. Fox, and Martin N. Rossor: Assessment
and investigation of the cognitively impaired adult
* 22: Barbara C. van Munster, Sophia de Rooij, and Sharon K. Inouye:
Delirium, drugs, toxins
* 23: Sam Nightingale, Benedict Daniel Michael, and Tom Solomon: CNS
infections
* 24: Nicholas J. C. Smith and Timothy M. Cox: Metabolic dementia
* 25: Geert Jan Biessels and Philip Scheltens: Vascular cognitive
impairment
* 26: Sergi Martinez-Ramirez, Steven M. Greenberg, and Anand
Viswanathan: Cerebral amyloid angiopathy and CNS vasculitis
* 27: Maria A. Ron: CNS inflammatory causes: Multiple sclerosis
* 28: Sarosh R. Irani, Thomas D. Miller, and Angela Vincent: CNS
inflammatory causes: Autoimmune encephalitis
* 29: Tamas Revesz, Tammaryn Lashley, and Janice L. Holton: Pathology
of degenerative dementias
* 30: Rita Guerreiro and Jose Bras: Genetics of degenerative dementias
* 31: Davina J. Hensman Moss, Nicholas W. Wood, and Sarah J. Tabrizi:
Other genetic causes of cognitive impairment
* 32: Bruno Dubois and Olga Uspenskaya: Changing concepts and new
definitions for Alzheimer's disease
* 33: Susan Rountree and Rachelle S. Doody: Presentation and Management
of Alzheimer's disease
* 34: Jonathan D. Rohrer and Jason D. Warren: Primary progressive
aphasia
* 35: Bruce Miller and Soo Jin Yoon: Frontotemporal dementia
* 36: Hasmet A. Hanagasi, Basar Bilgiç, and Murat Emre: Dementia with
lewy bodies and Parkinson's disease dementia
* 37: Elizabeth A. Coon and Keith A. Josephs: Corticobasal
degeneration, progressive supranuclear palsy, multiple system
atrophy, argyrophilic grain disease and rarer neurodegenerative
diseases
* 38: Simon Mead, Peter Rudge, and John Collinge: Prion diseases
* 39: David J. Sharp, Simon Fleminger, and Jane Powell: Traumatic brain
injury (TBI)
* 40: Tom Foltynie and Ludvic Zrinzo: Neurosurgery for cognitive
disorders
* 41: Philip D. Harvey: Cognition in severe mental illness:
Schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and depression
* Section 1: Normal cognitive function
* 1: Charles Gross: Historical aspects of neurology
* 2: Giovanna Zamboni: Functional specialisation and network
connectivity in brain function
* 3: Teresa Torralva, Ezequiel Gleichgerrcht, Agustin Ibañez, and
Facundo Manes: The frontal lobes
* 4: Morgan D. Barense, Jason D. Warren, Timothy J. Bussey, and Lisa M.
Saksida: The temporal lobes
* 5: Masud Husain: Parietal cortex
* 6: Geraint Rees: The human occipital lobe
* 7: James Rowe and Timothy Rittman: The basal ganglia in cognitive
disorders
* 8: Marco Catani: Principles of white matter organization
* 9: Trevor W. Robbins: Neurochemistry of cognition
* Section 2: Cognitive dysfunction
* 10: Seyed A Sajjadi and Peter J. Nestor: Bedside assessment of
cognition
* 11: Diana Caine and Sebastian Crutch: Neuropsychological assessment
* 12: Dalia Abou Zeky and Argye E. Hillis: Acquired disorders of
language and speech
* 13: Lara Harris, Kate Humphreys, Ellen M. Migo, and Michael D.
Kopelman: Memory disorders
* 14: Anna Katharina Schaadt and Georg Kerkhoff: Vision and visual
processing deficits
* 15: Paolo Bartolomeo and Raffaella Migliaccio: Disorders of
attentional processes
* 16: Georg Goldenberg: Apraxia
* 17: Marinella Cappelletti: The neuropsychology of acquired
calculation disorders
* 18: Alexander P. Leff: Disorders of reading and writing
* 19: Dylan Wint and Jeffrey Cummings: Neuropsychiatric aspects of
cognitive impairment
* Section 3: Cognitive impairment and dementia
* 20: Thais Minett and Carol Brayne: Epidemiology of dementias
* 21: Jonathan M. Schott, Nick C. Fox, and Martin N. Rossor: Assessment
and investigation of the cognitively impaired adult
* 22: Barbara C. van Munster, Sophia de Rooij, and Sharon K. Inouye:
Delirium, drugs, toxins
* 23: Sam Nightingale, Benedict Daniel Michael, and Tom Solomon: CNS
infections
* 24: Nicholas J. C. Smith and Timothy M. Cox: Metabolic dementia
* 25: Geert Jan Biessels and Philip Scheltens: Vascular cognitive
impairment
* 26: Sergi Martinez-Ramirez, Steven M. Greenberg, and Anand
Viswanathan: Cerebral amyloid angiopathy and CNS vasculitis
* 27: Maria A. Ron: CNS inflammatory causes: Multiple sclerosis
* 28: Sarosh R. Irani, Thomas D. Miller, and Angela Vincent: CNS
inflammatory causes: Autoimmune encephalitis
* 29: Tamas Revesz, Tammaryn Lashley, and Janice L. Holton: Pathology
of degenerative dementias
* 30: Rita Guerreiro and Jose Bras: Genetics of degenerative dementias
* 31: Davina J. Hensman Moss, Nicholas W. Wood, and Sarah J. Tabrizi:
Other genetic causes of cognitive impairment
* 32: Bruno Dubois and Olga Uspenskaya: Changing concepts and new
definitions for Alzheimer's disease
* 33: Susan Rountree and Rachelle S. Doody: Presentation and Management
of Alzheimer's disease
* 34: Jonathan D. Rohrer and Jason D. Warren: Primary progressive
aphasia
* 35: Bruce Miller and Soo Jin Yoon: Frontotemporal dementia
* 36: Hasmet A. Hanagasi, Basar Bilgiç, and Murat Emre: Dementia with
lewy bodies and Parkinson's disease dementia
* 37: Elizabeth A. Coon and Keith A. Josephs: Corticobasal
degeneration, progressive supranuclear palsy, multiple system
atrophy, argyrophilic grain disease and rarer neurodegenerative
diseases
* 38: Simon Mead, Peter Rudge, and John Collinge: Prion diseases
* 39: David J. Sharp, Simon Fleminger, and Jane Powell: Traumatic brain
injury (TBI)
* 40: Tom Foltynie and Ludvic Zrinzo: Neurosurgery for cognitive
disorders
* 41: Philip D. Harvey: Cognition in severe mental illness:
Schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and depression
* 1: Charles Gross: Historical aspects of neurology
* 2: Giovanna Zamboni: Functional specialisation and network
connectivity in brain function
* 3: Teresa Torralva, Ezequiel Gleichgerrcht, Agustin Ibañez, and
Facundo Manes: The frontal lobes
* 4: Morgan D. Barense, Jason D. Warren, Timothy J. Bussey, and Lisa M.
Saksida: The temporal lobes
* 5: Masud Husain: Parietal cortex
* 6: Geraint Rees: The human occipital lobe
* 7: James Rowe and Timothy Rittman: The basal ganglia in cognitive
disorders
* 8: Marco Catani: Principles of white matter organization
* 9: Trevor W. Robbins: Neurochemistry of cognition
* Section 2: Cognitive dysfunction
* 10: Seyed A Sajjadi and Peter J. Nestor: Bedside assessment of
cognition
* 11: Diana Caine and Sebastian Crutch: Neuropsychological assessment
* 12: Dalia Abou Zeky and Argye E. Hillis: Acquired disorders of
language and speech
* 13: Lara Harris, Kate Humphreys, Ellen M. Migo, and Michael D.
Kopelman: Memory disorders
* 14: Anna Katharina Schaadt and Georg Kerkhoff: Vision and visual
processing deficits
* 15: Paolo Bartolomeo and Raffaella Migliaccio: Disorders of
attentional processes
* 16: Georg Goldenberg: Apraxia
* 17: Marinella Cappelletti: The neuropsychology of acquired
calculation disorders
* 18: Alexander P. Leff: Disorders of reading and writing
* 19: Dylan Wint and Jeffrey Cummings: Neuropsychiatric aspects of
cognitive impairment
* Section 3: Cognitive impairment and dementia
* 20: Thais Minett and Carol Brayne: Epidemiology of dementias
* 21: Jonathan M. Schott, Nick C. Fox, and Martin N. Rossor: Assessment
and investigation of the cognitively impaired adult
* 22: Barbara C. van Munster, Sophia de Rooij, and Sharon K. Inouye:
Delirium, drugs, toxins
* 23: Sam Nightingale, Benedict Daniel Michael, and Tom Solomon: CNS
infections
* 24: Nicholas J. C. Smith and Timothy M. Cox: Metabolic dementia
* 25: Geert Jan Biessels and Philip Scheltens: Vascular cognitive
impairment
* 26: Sergi Martinez-Ramirez, Steven M. Greenberg, and Anand
Viswanathan: Cerebral amyloid angiopathy and CNS vasculitis
* 27: Maria A. Ron: CNS inflammatory causes: Multiple sclerosis
* 28: Sarosh R. Irani, Thomas D. Miller, and Angela Vincent: CNS
inflammatory causes: Autoimmune encephalitis
* 29: Tamas Revesz, Tammaryn Lashley, and Janice L. Holton: Pathology
of degenerative dementias
* 30: Rita Guerreiro and Jose Bras: Genetics of degenerative dementias
* 31: Davina J. Hensman Moss, Nicholas W. Wood, and Sarah J. Tabrizi:
Other genetic causes of cognitive impairment
* 32: Bruno Dubois and Olga Uspenskaya: Changing concepts and new
definitions for Alzheimer's disease
* 33: Susan Rountree and Rachelle S. Doody: Presentation and Management
of Alzheimer's disease
* 34: Jonathan D. Rohrer and Jason D. Warren: Primary progressive
aphasia
* 35: Bruce Miller and Soo Jin Yoon: Frontotemporal dementia
* 36: Hasmet A. Hanagasi, Basar Bilgiç, and Murat Emre: Dementia with
lewy bodies and Parkinson's disease dementia
* 37: Elizabeth A. Coon and Keith A. Josephs: Corticobasal
degeneration, progressive supranuclear palsy, multiple system
atrophy, argyrophilic grain disease and rarer neurodegenerative
diseases
* 38: Simon Mead, Peter Rudge, and John Collinge: Prion diseases
* 39: David J. Sharp, Simon Fleminger, and Jane Powell: Traumatic brain
injury (TBI)
* 40: Tom Foltynie and Ludvic Zrinzo: Neurosurgery for cognitive
disorders
* 41: Philip D. Harvey: Cognition in severe mental illness:
Schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and depression
* Section 1: Normal cognitive function
* 1: Charles Gross: Historical aspects of neurology
* 2: Giovanna Zamboni: Functional specialisation and network
connectivity in brain function
* 3: Teresa Torralva, Ezequiel Gleichgerrcht, Agustin Ibañez, and
Facundo Manes: The frontal lobes
* 4: Morgan D. Barense, Jason D. Warren, Timothy J. Bussey, and Lisa M.
Saksida: The temporal lobes
* 5: Masud Husain: Parietal cortex
* 6: Geraint Rees: The human occipital lobe
* 7: James Rowe and Timothy Rittman: The basal ganglia in cognitive
disorders
* 8: Marco Catani: Principles of white matter organization
* 9: Trevor W. Robbins: Neurochemistry of cognition
* Section 2: Cognitive dysfunction
* 10: Seyed A Sajjadi and Peter J. Nestor: Bedside assessment of
cognition
* 11: Diana Caine and Sebastian Crutch: Neuropsychological assessment
* 12: Dalia Abou Zeky and Argye E. Hillis: Acquired disorders of
language and speech
* 13: Lara Harris, Kate Humphreys, Ellen M. Migo, and Michael D.
Kopelman: Memory disorders
* 14: Anna Katharina Schaadt and Georg Kerkhoff: Vision and visual
processing deficits
* 15: Paolo Bartolomeo and Raffaella Migliaccio: Disorders of
attentional processes
* 16: Georg Goldenberg: Apraxia
* 17: Marinella Cappelletti: The neuropsychology of acquired
calculation disorders
* 18: Alexander P. Leff: Disorders of reading and writing
* 19: Dylan Wint and Jeffrey Cummings: Neuropsychiatric aspects of
cognitive impairment
* Section 3: Cognitive impairment and dementia
* 20: Thais Minett and Carol Brayne: Epidemiology of dementias
* 21: Jonathan M. Schott, Nick C. Fox, and Martin N. Rossor: Assessment
and investigation of the cognitively impaired adult
* 22: Barbara C. van Munster, Sophia de Rooij, and Sharon K. Inouye:
Delirium, drugs, toxins
* 23: Sam Nightingale, Benedict Daniel Michael, and Tom Solomon: CNS
infections
* 24: Nicholas J. C. Smith and Timothy M. Cox: Metabolic dementia
* 25: Geert Jan Biessels and Philip Scheltens: Vascular cognitive
impairment
* 26: Sergi Martinez-Ramirez, Steven M. Greenberg, and Anand
Viswanathan: Cerebral amyloid angiopathy and CNS vasculitis
* 27: Maria A. Ron: CNS inflammatory causes: Multiple sclerosis
* 28: Sarosh R. Irani, Thomas D. Miller, and Angela Vincent: CNS
inflammatory causes: Autoimmune encephalitis
* 29: Tamas Revesz, Tammaryn Lashley, and Janice L. Holton: Pathology
of degenerative dementias
* 30: Rita Guerreiro and Jose Bras: Genetics of degenerative dementias
* 31: Davina J. Hensman Moss, Nicholas W. Wood, and Sarah J. Tabrizi:
Other genetic causes of cognitive impairment
* 32: Bruno Dubois and Olga Uspenskaya: Changing concepts and new
definitions for Alzheimer's disease
* 33: Susan Rountree and Rachelle S. Doody: Presentation and Management
of Alzheimer's disease
* 34: Jonathan D. Rohrer and Jason D. Warren: Primary progressive
aphasia
* 35: Bruce Miller and Soo Jin Yoon: Frontotemporal dementia
* 36: Hasmet A. Hanagasi, Basar Bilgiç, and Murat Emre: Dementia with
lewy bodies and Parkinson's disease dementia
* 37: Elizabeth A. Coon and Keith A. Josephs: Corticobasal
degeneration, progressive supranuclear palsy, multiple system
atrophy, argyrophilic grain disease and rarer neurodegenerative
diseases
* 38: Simon Mead, Peter Rudge, and John Collinge: Prion diseases
* 39: David J. Sharp, Simon Fleminger, and Jane Powell: Traumatic brain
injury (TBI)
* 40: Tom Foltynie and Ludvic Zrinzo: Neurosurgery for cognitive
disorders
* 41: Philip D. Harvey: Cognition in severe mental illness:
Schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and depression