agnosia in English

noun
1
inability to interpret sensations and hence to recognize things, typically as a result of brain damage.
Dementia is chronic and progressive, and it is characterized by the gradual onset of impaired memory and deficits in two or more areas of cognition, such as anomia, agnosia or apraxia.

Use "agnosia" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "agnosia" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "agnosia", or refer to the context using the word "agnosia" in the English Dictionary.

1. There are three major types of Agnosia: visual Agnosia, auditory Agnosia, and tactile Agnosia.

2. " Agnosia? "

3. Agnosia These may arise because of Agnosia and oral dyspraxia

4. Agnosias are common in parietal lobe tumours, and are classified according to the sense affected—e.g., touch (tactile agnosia), hearing (auditory agnosia), sight (visual agnosia), smell (olfactory agnosia), or taste (gustatory agnosia).

5. Visual agnosia

6. Agnosia: DiAgnosis and treatment

7. You know, " Agnosia ", " Agnosticism ".

8. Neurologists call this visual agnosia.

9. Agnosia means “with-out knowledge”

10. Agnosia usually affects only a single information

11. Agnosia: Inability to Recognize Common Objects of People

12. Person with Agnosia trying to brush his teeth

13. Agnosia Definition Agnosia is a neuropsychological disorder characterized by the inability to recognize common objects, persons, or sounds, in the absence of perceptual disability

14. Method of therapy and haptic gaming system for sensory agnosia

15. Agnosia, loss or diminution of the ability to recognize objects, sounds, smells, tastes, or other sensory stimuli. Agnosia is sometimes described as perception without meaning

16. ProsopAgnosia is also known as face blindness or facial Agnosia

17. Finger Agnosia and cognitive deficits in patients with Alzheimer's disease

18. K.M. was familiar with the rare diagnosis 'visual agnosia' (Seelenblindheit).

19. Visual Agnosias include pure object agnosia, prosopagnosia, akinetopsia, and pure alexia

20. Visual Agnosia is characterized by the inability to recognize familiar objects

21. Acute onset visual agnosia points to a stroke or brain tumor.

22. Auditory Agnosias include pure word deafness, phonagnosia, and pure sound agnosia.

23. Visual Agnosia is an impairment in recognition of visually presented objects

24. Joana Prats suffers from Agnosia, a strange neuropsychological illness that affects her perception

25. As nouns the difference between Anomia and agnosia is that Anomia is (neurology) the inability to remember names while agnosia is the inability to recognize objects by use of the senses.

26. Joana Prats suffers from Agnosia, a strange neuropsychological illness that affects her perception

27. Patients with Agnosia cannot under-stand or recognise what they see, hear or feel

28. Certainly atypical depression, aphasia, and Agnosia can happen with any of the BSN disorders

29. Agnosia is inability to identify an object using one or more of the senses

30. Definition of Agnosia : loss or diminution of the ability to recognize familiar objects or stimuli usually as a result of brain damage First Known Use of Agnosia 1883, in the meaning defined above

31. This analysis indicates a close structural analogy to the syndrome of perceptive visual agnosia.

32. Agnosia is loss of the ability to identify objects using one or more of the senses

33. Agnosia takes place as the frontal, occipital and temporal lobes of the brain become damaged

34. Its most common manifestations are hyperorality with changes in dietary habits, hypersexuality, and visual agnosia.

35. The term ' Agnosia ' literally means 'without knowledge.' Visual Agnosia describes the situation in which patients are unable to recognise stimuli visually; however, they may be able to use other senses or logical reasoning to aid identification.

36. Can lead poisoning cause visual agnosia?Not without lead showing up in the blood work

37. Agnosia is a rare disorder characterized by an inability to recognize and identify objects or persons

38. I know you' re not a news anchor or a supermodel,' cause those jobs seldom cause agnosia

39. NOTA Pour les personnes sourdes. visual agnosia agnosie visuelle (n.f.) Inability to recognize familiar objects by sight.

40. Agnosia is a rare disorder in which a person cannot recognize familiar objects, persons, or sounds

41. A method for treating patients with sensor agnosia is described that uses a gaming system with a specialised two handed game controller that can provide isolated haptic feedback to the patient's hand that has the greatest sensory agnosia.

42. Agnosias are defined in terms of the specific sensory modality affected—usually visual, auditory, or tactile—or they may be selective for one class of items within a sensory modality, such as color agnosia or prosopagnosia (agnosia for faces)

43. Agnosia is the general term for the inability, due to brain damage, to recognize previously familiar objects

44. Primary Agnosia is associated with bilateral damage to the ventral visual stream, including the lingual and fusiform gyri

45. From the Cambridge English Corpus Recognition errors are semantic (identifying a camel as a dog) whereas in apperceptive Agnosia

46. Every other month, he was having visual agnosia, because every other month he was on all three drugs simultaneously

47. As nouns the difference between apraxia and Agnosia is that apraxia is total or partial loss of the ability to perform coordinated movements or manipulate objects in the absence of motor or sensory impairment; specifically, a disorder of motor planning while Agnosia is the …

48. Agnosia translate: 失認症(由於大腦損傷導致不能辨識物件)

49. Object Agnosia, that is, the inability to name objects SimultanAgnosia, that is, the inability to recognize a whole image although individual details are recognized Auditory: People with auditory Agnosia are unable to recognize sounds and language to varying degrees, depending on the severity of the disease.

50. Constructional apraxia may also be viewed as a spatial agnosia, that is, a defect in the comprehension of spatial relationships