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         Amnesia:     more books (100)
  1. Social Amnesia: A Critique of Conformist Psychology by Russell Jacoby, 1975-06
  2. Memories of Amnesia by Lawrence Shainberg, 1989-10-30
  3. The Missing Italian Nuremberg: Cultural Amnesia and Postwar Politics (Italian & Italian American Studies) by Michele Battini, 2007-08-21
  4. Memory and Amnesia: An Introduction by Alan J. Parkin, 1997-04
  5. Social Amnesia: A Critique of Contemporary Psychology
  6. After Amnesia: Tradition and Change in Indian Literary Criticism by G. N. Devy, 1992-12
  7. Memory, Amnesia, and the Hippocampal System (Bradford Books) by Neal J. Cohen, Howard Eichenbaum, 1995-09-25
  8. Amnesia (Paralelo Cero / Zero Parallel) by Fernando Lalana, 2007-06-30
  9. Amnesia by Andrew Neiderman, 2001-06-01
  10. Urban Memory: History and Amnesia in the Modern City by Mark Crinson, 2005-07-19
  11. The Cowardice of Amnesia by Ellyn Maybe, 1998-05
  12. Amnesia by Sinclair Smith, 1995-12
  13. The amnesia factor: Extraterrestrial communications breakthrough by Joseph H Mathes, 1975
  14. Amnesia Moon 1ST Edition by Jonathan Lethem, 1995

41. Extrema Stella Sideris - Amnesia
Regolamento, artwork e supporto per il wargame tridimensionale amnesia, appuntamenti con lo staff ed iniziative.
http://www.extremasideris.com/

42. Amnesia - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
In anterograde amnesia, new events are not transferred to longterm memory, Lacunar amnesia is the loss of memory about one specific event.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amnesia
Amnesia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
See Amnesia (Computer Game) for other meanings of this word
Amnesia (or historically, amnaesia ) is a condition in which memory is disturbed. The causes of amnesia are organic or functional. Organic causes include damage to the brain, through trauma or disease, or use of certain (generally sedative) drugs. Functional causes are psychological factors, such as defense mechanisms. Hysterical post-traumatic amnesia is an example of this. Amnesia may also be spontaneous, in the case of transient global amnesia . This global type of amnesia is more common in middle-aged to elderly people, particularly males, and usually lasts less than 24 hours. Amnesia can be temporary. As someone recovers, older memories will generally return first. The memories of the event that caused the amnesia are often never recalled. Treatment varies according to the type of amnesia and the cause of the problem. Sufferers of amnesia should seek medical attention. edit
Types of amnesia
  • In anterograde amnesia , new events are not transferred to long-term memory, so the sufferer will not be able to remember anything that occurs after the onset of this type of amnesia for more than a few moments. The complement of this is

43. Radio Amnesia
Radio con mucho rock, diversi³n y cosas bizarras.
http://www.radioamnesia.8k.com
Free Web Hosting Provider Web Hosting E-commerce High Speed Internet ... Photo Sharing if(window.ivnRotate) window.ivnRotate1 = new window.ivnRotate('ivnRotate1',0,document.awsSearch1.Keywords) Popular Searches:

44. Anterograde Amnesia - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Anterograde amnesia is a form of amnesia where new events are not transferred Sufferers from pure anterograde amnesia will still be able to remember
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anterograde_amnesia

45. Memory, The Brain, And Amnesia
Of course, amnesia is a term that refers to memory deficits. Anterograde amnesia refers to a deficit in learning subsequent to the onset of the disorder
http://www.psychology.mcmaster.ca/3vv3/chapter9.htm

46. Java Applets, Flash Animations And Movies, And Web Utilities By Consulting.com,
Protects privacy, by deleting traces of viewed Web sites, manages browser cookies, cache, and visited URLs, as well as temporary files, Recent Documents folder, and Recycle Bin. Win95/98/Me/NT/2000
http://www.consultcom.com/asp/frames.asp?pagename=Amnesia

47. EMedicine - Transient Global Amnesia : Article By Roy Sucholeiki, MD
Transient Global amnesia Transient global amnesia (TGA) has been a well-described phenomenon for more than 40 years. Clinically, it manifests with a
http://www.emedicine.com/neuro/topic380.htm
(advertisement) Home Specialties Resource Centers CME ... Patient Education Articles Images CME Advanced Search Consumer Health Link to this site Back to: eMedicine Specialties Neurology Neuro-vascular Diseases
Transient Global Amnesia
Last Updated: April 21, 2005 Rate this Article Email to a Colleague Synonyms and related keywords: transient memory loss, paroxysmal loss of memory, transient loss of memory, immediate recall ability, remote memory, retrograde memory loss, semantic memory, syntax memory, visual-spatial skills, amnesia , TGA, vertebrobasilar system migraine variant temporal lobe seizure transient ischemic attack , emotional stress, cold-water exposure, Valsalva maneuver, venous anatomy anomalies , jugular vein valves, ischemia to memory areas in brain, back-pressure in jugular venous system, disruption of intracranial arterial flow, increased sympathetic activity, increased intrathoracic pressure, disrupted blood flow to thalamic structures, disrupted blood flow to mesial temporal structures, increased venous return to superior vena cava AUTHOR INFORMATION Section 1 of 8 Author Information Introduction Clinical Differentials ... Bibliography
Author: Roy Sucholeiki, MD

48. Asia Times: Fallout From Nuclear Amnesia
Article discussing the contamination of troops and bystanders in the tests at Maralinga.
http://www.atimes.com/oceania/CD16Ah02.html
May 16, 2001 atimes.com
Oceania
PACIFIC BEAT
Fallout from nuclear amnesia

By Alan Boyd
SYDNEY - If a week is a long time in politics, then a lapse of 50 years truly tests the boundaries of government accountability.
Never ones for magnanimous gestures over the botched affairs of state, politicians tend to hide behind security notices or collective amnesia when the blame is being apportioned.
So perhaps we shouldn't be too surprised that it has taken this long for the authorities in Britain and Australia to come clean on one of the more incredible chapters of the early Cold War nuclear frenzy. Britain has admitted for the first time that troops were used as human guinea pigs for a testing program in Australia in the 1950s that helped it join the United States and the Soviet Union in the nuclear club. The admission came begrudgingly, and only after it had been independently confirmed in released Australian military records that servicemen were deliberately exposed to nuclear fallout to test their levels of tolerance to illness. Stricken with a range of cancers and deformities, some of the soldiers have been fighting for decades to have their plight accorded official recognition, which might open the door to compensation.
Why such obduracy over events that occurred a lifetime ago and have long since lost any of the relevance that they might once have had to global security? Probably because Western governments are loathe to stir an even bigger can of worms over the considerable liberties that they took on the nuclear issue between the 1950s and 1990s, when Pacific states were frontline laboratories for superpower experimentation.

49. EMedicine - Delirium, Dementia, And Amnesia : Article By Paul S Gerstein, MD
Delirium, Dementia, and amnesia Delirium, dementia, amnesia, and certain other alterations in cognition are subsumed under more general terms such as
http://www.emedicine.com/emerg/topic345.htm
(advertisement) Home Specialties Resource Centers CME ... Patient Education Articles Images CME Advanced Search Consumer Health Link to this site Back to: eMedicine Specialties Emergency Medicine Neurology
Delirium, Dementia, and Amnesia
Last Updated: April 4, 2005 Rate this Article Email to a Colleague Synonyms and related keywords: AUTHOR INFORMATION Section 1 of 10 Author Information Introduction Clinical Differentials ... Bibliography
Author: Paul S Gerstein, MD , Senior Staff Physician, Department of Emergency Medicine, Holyoke Medical Center Paul S Gerstein, MD, is a member of the following medical societies: American Academy of Emergency Medicine , and Massachusetts Medical Society Editor(s): Eric Kardon, MD , Consulting Staff, Department of Emergency Medicine, Athens Regional Medical Center; Francisco Talavera, PharmD, PhD , Senior Pharmacy Editor, eMedicine; J Stephen Huff, MD , Associate Professor of Emergency Medicine and Neurology, Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Virginia Health System; John Halamka, MD

50. BBC NEWS | Health | Medical Notes | Amnesia
Memory loss or amnesia is usually temporary and it can be triggered by both psychological and physical trauma.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/medical_notes/a-b/167771.stm
NEWS SPORT WEATHER WORLD SERVICE ... A-Z INDEX SEARCH
You are in: Health: Medical notes News Front Page Africa ... Programmes SERVICES Daily E-mail News Ticker Mobile/PDAs Text Only ... Help EDITIONS Change to UK Saturday, 8 February, 2003, 15:43 GMT Amnesia
Amnesia can take many forms
Amnesia is a term used to cover the partial or complete loss of memory. It is most often a temporary condition and covers only a part of a person's experience, such as immediate memory. The causes of amnesia range from psychological trauma to brain damage caused by a blow to the head or conditions such as a brain tumour, a stroke or swelling of the brain. There are many definitions covering the different types of amnesia. What is amnesia? The main types of amnesia are: Anterograde amnesia: People who find it hard to remember ongoing events after suffering damage to the head. They do not tend to forget their childhood or who they are, but have trouble remembering day-to-day events. Retrograde amnesia: People who find it hard to retrieve memories prior to an incident in which they suffer damage to the head. Sometimes people never remember the seconds leading up to the incident. Korsakoff's psychosis : Memory loss caused by alcohol abuse. The person's short-term memory may be normal, but they will have severe problems recalling a simple story, lists of unrelated words, faces and complex patterns.

51. Beautiful Amnesia
Beautiful amnesia Brrr. August 12, 2005 @ 213 am · Filed under General Blah. It’s been freezing these few days over here in Melbourne.
http://www.beautifulamnesia.com/
@import url( http://beautifulamnesia.com/wordpress/wp-content/themes/almost-spring.1/style.css ); var sc_project=534213; var sc_partition=3; var sc_security=""; var sc_invisible=1;
Beautiful Amnesia
Earthdance Melbourne 2005
Photo Blogs More here , but not many since I was there to dance Permalink Comments
Aurora
Scribblings Photo courtesy of BrynJ .Took my breath away. I want to write all the souls of the universe
into the wispy spirals of this aurora
Colour you in with the pencil made of rainbow
and swim through this spectrum of splendour
in eternity Permalink Comments
Earth to Wen
General Blah ... Photo Blogs There are a few things that have happened lately. First of all, one of my photos got into the top three for an online photo competition - Unfortunately only the winner gets a brand new Canon 350D Thirdly, I finally had a friend who trusted me enough to let me try and take some potrait photos of her. Semi-naked. That was a thrill. Not because she was topless, but because I actually had someone who was happy to sit in front of my camera lens and do as she was told. Topless. The truth is, she was the one that told me what she wanted most of the time, but hey sometimes I took control and barked commands. You get the drift. And I get the fun.

52. CNN.com - Doctor Blames Nightmare For Man's Amnesia - Feb. 19, 2004
CNN
http://cnn.com/2004/HEALTH/02/19/nightmare.amnesia.ap/index.html
International Edition MEMBER SERVICES The Web CNN.com Home Page World U.S. Weather ... Autos SERVICES Video E-mail Newsletters Your E-mail Alerts RSS ... Contact Us SEARCH Web CNN.com
Doctor blames nightmare for man's amnesia
But other medical experts skeptical of doctor's claim
Story Tools BOSTON, Massachusetts (AP) A man developed temporary amnesia from the shock of dreaming that his son was killed in combat in Iraq, even though the young man was fine and not even in the military, according to a report in a medical journal. HEALTH LIBRARY Health Library YOUR E-MAIL ALERTS Medicines Emergency Planning or Create your own Manage alerts What is this? Dream-induced amnesia would be highly unusual. Amnesia is typically caused by a physical insult to the brain a blow to the head, an alcohol blackout, an infection. Dr. Mark Marinella at Wright State University School of Medicine in Dayton, Ohio, reported the amnesia case in a letter to the editor in Thursday's New England Journal of Medicine. To buttress his explanation, he cited a classic psychoanalytic study by Sigmund Freud of a patient who developed amnesia from the shock of her father's death. Other specialists were skeptical of the Ohio doctor's report. They said a tiny stroke or some other undetected physical event in the brain was a much more likely cause of the amnesia.

53. Minister Claiming Amnesia Delivers First Sermon At New Dallas Church
CNN
http://cnn.com/2001/US/01/22/missing.minister.ap/index.html

54. Memory Loss & The Brain
Anterograde amnesia is a selective memory deficit, resulting from brain injury, It is now becoming apparent that while anterograde amnesia devastates
http://www.memorylossonline.com/glossary/anterogradeamnesia.html
Get Your FREE subscription today Current Issues Past Issues Who We Are ... From the Editor Editor's Note Memory News To Sleep, Perchance To Learn Unforgettable Research on the links between memory and emotion may hold the key to preventing post-traumatic stress disorder.
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Memory Tip
"I can't remember your name, but your famous face looks familiar..." Glossary Anterograde Amnesia Anterograde amnesia is a selective memory deficit, resulting from brain injury, in which the individual is severely impaired in learning new information. Memories for events that occurred before the injury may be largely spared, but events that occurred since the injury may be lost. In practice, this means that an individual with

55. Amnesia Man's Bid For Birth Certificate Rejected
CNN
http://cnn.com/2001/WORLD/americas/08/30/canada.amnesiaman.ap/index.html

56. NBC's Dateline - Amnesia
The injured brain, we might hope for a better one, or wish that someone else s wasn t so good. However, like it or not, our memory is an archive of our
http://www.msnbc.com/onair/nbc/dateline/amnesia/default.asp

How your brain remembers
The injured brain we might hope for a better one, or wish that someone else's wasn't so good. However, like it or not, our memory is an archive of our life's experiences, a personal history that defines who we are and what we are about. The memories we've stored, for better or worse, impact our lives every day. They help us make decisions and guide us as we forge ahead into the future. "Memory" describes processes in several parts of the brain's regions and structures by which experience and information are stored and recalled, both intentionally and automatically. In early development, memory is almost synonymous with learning and contributes to everything from education to judgment to social interactions. According to the Dana Alliance for Brain Initiatives, science is only beginning to understand what happens in your brain when you remember something, but the evidence is that memory involves improving the communication between brain cells. Still unsettled is how information flow between cells improves whether their connection strengthens or the individual brain cells change their properties. MSNBC Cover Back to OnAir Cover Previous Page

57. Recovered Memories Of Sexual Abuse: Scientific Research & Scholarly Resources
This page, by Jim Hopper, Ph.D., presents scientific research and scholarly resources addressing amnesia and delayed recall for memories of childhood sexual abuse.
http://www.jimhopper.com/memory/
By Jim Hopper, Ph.D.
(last revised 6/10/2005) kw: repressed false memory syndrome; repressed false memory syndrome; repressed false memory syndrome; child abuse, child abuse Amnesia for childhood sexual abuse is a condition. The existence of this condition is beyond dispute.
Repression is merely one explanation for what causes the condition of amnesia.
At least 10% of people sexually abused in childhood will have periods of complete amnesia for their abuse, followed by experiences of delayed recall.
(Conservative estimate based on published research. See below.) This is a very large individual Web page (over 50 printed pages). Please be patient as it loads. For your convenience, I suggest that you begin by checking out the Table of Contents, then scrolling down to read the Preface, Words of Caution, and Introduction. If you try to follow links in the Table of Contents before the page has fully loaded, you will have to reload it. I have highlighted in red those passages which particularly fit with my goals. These do not correspond to emphases in the original texts. Again, this is a very large page, and the highlights can be used for browsing too.

58. Browser Detection

http://www.amnesia.ca/

59. Meridian Publishing, Inc.
If you have comments or suggestions, email me at adeliner@amnesia.com. This site created by The MDR Group and maintained by mikeRo Productions.
http://www.amnesia.com/
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60. Transient Global Amnesia (TGA)
Transient global amnesia The causes, epidemiology, diagnoses, symptoms, the course of the illness and prognosis.
http://schatz.sju.edu/neuro/disorders/tga.html
Transient Global Amnesia (TGA)
Cause:
  • Deactivation of the mesial temporal lobes and / or thalamus .
  • External stresses can trigger attack such as: Strenuous exertion, sexual intercourse, immersion in water, and emotional events.
Demographics/Epidemiology:
  • More common in men and most often occurs between the ages of 50-80.
  • 3 to 10 cases / 100,000 / year
DSM IV Diagnosis/symptoms:
  • Diagnosis criteria for 294.0 Amnestic Disorder
  • The development of memory as manifested by impairment in the ability to learn new information or the inability to recall previously learned information.
  • The memory disturbance causes significant impairment in social or occupational functioning and represents a significant decline from a previous level of functioning.
  • The memory disturbance does not occur exclusively during the course of delirium or a dementia.
  • There is evidence from a history, physical examination, or laboratory findings that the disturbance is the direct physiological consequence of a general medical condition (including physical trauma).
  • Specify if Transient: if memory impairment lasts for 1 month or less
Nature and extent of symptoms:
  • withdraw/ headache/ dizziness/ nausea/ sleepiness
  • permanent dense memory gap for period of attack
  • dense anterograde amnesia for 4-6 hours.

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