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Reflections of a Neuropsychologist

Brushes with Brains

John Bradshaw

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Paperback

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English
Routledge
23 April 2018
Reflections of a Neuropsychologist: Brushes with Brains follows the life of an influential neuropsychologist's fascinating and varied career. Unique in its autobiographical approach, it features coverage of research into human evolution, archaeology and neurology.

Beginning with his earliest memories (and implications for memory processes), John L. Bradshaw reflects on his archaeological expeditions preceding his primary career as a physiological psychologist and a behavioural neuroscientist. His influential research covers such rare neurological disorders as Huntington’s disease, Friedreich ataxia and Williams syndrome, and more common maladies like Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s diseases, stroke, Fragile X, Tourette’s syndrome, obsessive compulsive and attention deficit hyperactivity disorders, schizophrenia, autism and depression.

His fascinating personal experiences illustrating scientific discoveries will entertain, enthuse, encourage and inspire, and provide established research scientists and practising clinicians with a unique road map.
By:  
Imprint:   Routledge
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 156mm, 
Weight:   484g
ISBN:   9781138481237
ISBN 10:   1138481238
Pages:   276
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Primary
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Table of Contents Acknowledgements Foreword Chapter 1, The Evolution of All Things Chapter 2, Tools: Tacit and Tactual Symbols of Civilization Chapter 3, Art, Graffiti, Juvenilia or Kilroy? Chapter 4, Language, What Tales the Tongue may Tell Chapter 5, The Child is Father to the Man Chapter 6, The Old Forge and my First School Chapter 7, Secondary School Early Awakenings, or Where the Whore Moans, there Moan I Chapter 8, Dreaming Spires, Oxford Days, et in Arcadia Ego Chapter 9, Sticking up like a Sore Thumb, Hitch Hiking Chapter 10, An Industrious Interlude and Industrial Interval, ICI Chapter 11, An Ugly Picture in a Beautiful Frame Chapter 12, The Golden Road, or a Shot in the Dark Chapter 13, Eyes a Window to your Thoughts Chapter 14, Aotearoa, a Year in the Land of the Long White Cloud Chapter 15, Terra Australis (Nobis Adhuc) Incognita Chapter 16, Commissural Connectivity Chapter 17, Harry McGurk, Read My Lips, Ventriloquism Chapter 18, Mirror, Mirror on the Wall, Symmetrical Stimuli and Bimanual Responses Chapter 19, Consciousness, Will and Time Chapter 20, When Ignorance Is Bliss Chapter 21, I Didn’t Think I Had Noticed It, Unconscious Processing Chapter 22, When Recognition Fails, Agnosia Chapter 23, Phantom Legs and Neglected Arms Chapter 24, Is Your Tuesday Green? Synaesthesia Chapter 25, Bodily Integrity and Identity, Is it really me? Chapter 26, Empathy for Pain and Mirror Neurons Chapter 27, Stop it, it Tickles; Why You Can’t Tickle Yourself Chapter 28, Huntington’s Disease, the Lady of the Lake and the Hunt for the Gene Chapter 29, Parkinson’s Disease, When Go Turns to Slow Chapter 30, Musicians’ Dystonia A Brain Out Of Tune Chapter 31, Clothes-pegs, Sex, Hobbies, Addiction and Gambling Chapter 32, Fun, Fraud and Fabrication, What a Tangled Web We Weave Chapter 33, A God of the Gaps and Dental Distress Chapter 34, The Little Brain Chapter 35, The Magician’s Apprentice: Back to Basics Chapter 36, STROKE: The Hour that Struck Chapter 37, I’m as Old as I Feel Chapter 38, Where to now? Some Forward-Looking After Thoughts Suggestions for Further Reading

John L. Bradshaw originally received a scholarship to study Classical Languages at Merton College, Oxford (1958), before transferring to Psychology, Physiology and Philosophy. After two years (1962–1964) as a systems analyst for Imperial Chemical Industries, John completed a PhD in Physiological Psychology at Sheffield University (1967). He then worked at the University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand (1967–1968), before moving to the newly-established Monash University in Melbourne, Australia, rising to a Personal Chair and an Emeritus Professorship. His group has worked on movement, neurodevelopmental and neurodegenerative disorders, human evolution and the evolution of language, praxis and tool use, synaesthesia, spatial representation, embodiment, mirror neuron, phantom limb and many other arcane phenomena.

Reviews for Reflections of a Neuropsychologist: Brushes with Brains

Neuropsychology has been a fecund source of insight about the brain and the mind. Modern cognitive neuroscience originated from it. In Reflections of a Neuropsychologist, John L. Bradshaw provides an informed and entertaining account of its origin. --Carlo Umilta, M.D., Emeritus Professor of Neuropsychology, University of Padua, Italy.


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