Saturday, 17 July 2010

Myopic paraphasia_Herror Flynn syndrome

Cochlear deafness, myopia and oligophrenia syndrome, dominant myopia concluding in fluent dysphasia characterized by empty speech that is still grammatical but in which there is deficiency of substantive words, reducing objects to their basic yet distorted elements.Many literal and paraphasic errors occur in speech, of which the patient is unaware.Studies upon male and female groups conducted by Jakel&Jacobsene, showed evidence of gender irregularities, with male subjects displaying a tendency to pornographic hyperphasia, while female subjects experiencing to-and-fro pendular oscillation of the eyes at about 10 Hz, associated with a change in object fixation.

3 comments:

xtina said...

Romantic attraction in humans and its antecedent in other mammalian species play a primary role: this neural mechanism motivates individuals to focus their courtship energy on specific others, thereby conserving valuable time and metabolic energy, and facilitating mate choice.

http://www.biopsychiatry.com/lovedopa.htm

xtina said...

Researchers believe the pair bond evolved from the parent-child bond, which may ex­plain why we feel romantic attachments so strongly. The same neurochemicals—oxy­tocin, vasopressin and dopamine—have been implicated in both relationships, and the be­havioral patterns associated with parental and romantic bond formation and sepa­ration are also similar. “We think about parent-child relationships and adult ro­man­tic relationships as being funda­mentally different,” Diamond explains, “but it really boils down to the same functional purpose: creating a psycho­logical drive to be near the other person, to want to take care of them, and being resistant to being separated from them.”

xtina said...

http://books.google.gr/books?id=pMbhu-vXVtAC&pg=PA361&lpg=PA361&dq=paraphasic+myopia&source=bl&ots=Ks3Eb1HhOZ&sig=UF6wRxNLIqQ4dQWNeTcwKjS8dYg&hl=el&ei=d1xBTM7_HtqfOImgsY0N&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CBcQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=paraphasic%20myopia&f=false