Title of article
Anosognosia as motivated unawareness: The ‘defence’ hypothesis revisited
Author/Authors
Turnbull، نويسنده , , Oliver H. and Fotopoulou، نويسنده , , Aikaterini and Solms، نويسنده , , Mark، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages
12
From page
18
To page
29
Abstract
Anosognosia for hemiplegia has seen a century of almost continuous research, yet a definitive understanding of its mechanism remains elusive. Essentially, anosognosic patients hold quasi-delusional beliefs about their paralysed limbs, in spite of all the contrary evidence, repeated questioning, and logical argument. We review a range of findings suggesting that emotion and motivation play an important role in anosognosia. We conclude that anosognosia involves (amongst other things) a process of psychological defence. This conclusion stems from a wide variety of clinical and experimental investigations, including data on implicit awareness of deficit, fluctuations in awareness over time, and dramatic effects upon awareness of psychological interventions such as psychotherapy, reframing of the emotional consequences of the paralysis, and first versus third person perspectival manipulations. In addition, we review and refute the (eight) arguments historically raised against the ‘defence’ hypothesis, including the claim that a defence-based account cannot explain the lateralised nature of the disorder. We argue that damage to a well-established right-lateralised emotion regulation system, with links to psychological processes that appear to underpin allocentric spatial cognition, plays a key role in anosognosia (at least in some patients). We conclude with a discussion of implications for clinical practice.
Keywords
Anosognosia , motivation , Egocentric spatial cognition , Defence , emotion , hemiplegia
Journal title
Cortex
Serial Year
2014
Journal title
Cortex
Record number
2301988
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