Disturbance of self-awareness after frontal system damage. Stuss, D. T. In Prigatano, G. P. & Schacter, D. L., editors, Awareness of deficit after brain injury: Clinical and theoretical issues., pages 63–83. Oxford University Press, New York, NY, 1991.
Disturbance of self-awareness after frontal system damage [link]Paper  abstract   bibtex   
brief review of disturbed awareness after frontal lobe pathology reported in earlier studies highlights the historical importance of the frontal systems to self-awareness and reality monitoring / against this background, two frameworks are provided in an initial attempt to characterize more specifically the relation of the frontal lobes to the general concept of awareness / first is a model that focuses on the anatomical organization of the brain as a means of understanding the clinical observations of alterations in behavior after frontal system damage / second is a psychological theory of self and consciousness that may provide insight for understanding disturbances of awareness after frontal lobe damage core of the chapter presents three examples, one previously published case and two new case studies, that highlight key features of disturbance of awareness after frontal pathology / these observations are mapped onto the proposed theoretical structures in an attempt to extract the salient characteristics of disturbed awareness after frontal system brain damage / schematic model differentiating disturbed awareness of fact from disturbed self-awareness is proposed (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved)
@incollection{stuss_disturbance_1991,
	address = {New York, NY},
	title = {Disturbance of self-awareness after frontal system damage},
	isbn = {0-19-505941-7},
	url = {https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&AuthType=ip,uid&db=psyh&AN=1991-97649-004&site=ehost-live},
	abstract = {brief review of disturbed awareness after frontal lobe pathology reported in earlier studies highlights the historical importance of the frontal systems to self-awareness and reality monitoring / against this background, two frameworks are provided in an initial attempt to characterize more specifically the relation of the frontal lobes to the general concept of awareness / first is a model that focuses on the anatomical organization of the brain as a means of understanding the clinical observations of alterations in behavior after frontal system damage / second is a psychological theory of self and consciousness that may provide insight for understanding disturbances of awareness after frontal lobe damage  core of the chapter presents three examples, one previously published case and two new case studies, that highlight key features of disturbance of awareness after frontal pathology / these observations are mapped onto the proposed theoretical structures in an attempt to extract the salient characteristics of disturbed awareness after frontal system brain damage / schematic model differentiating disturbed awareness of fact from disturbed self-awareness is proposed (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved)},
	booktitle = {Awareness of deficit after brain injury:  {Clinical} and theoretical issues.},
	publisher = {Oxford University Press},
	author = {Stuss, Donald T.},
	editor = {Prigatano, George P. and Schacter, Daniel L.},
	year = {1991},
	keywords = {Awareness, Brain Damage, Frontal Lobe, Reality Testing, Self-Perception, discusses the relation of the frontal lobe system activity to the perception of the self \& describes various types of disturbed awareness observed in frontal lobe pathology},
	pages = {63--83},
}

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