Higher Brain Function Research
Online ISSN : 1880-6716
Print ISSN : 0285-9513
ISSN-L : 0285-9513
Volume 19, Issue 1
Displaying 1-2 of 2 articles from this issue
Original article
  • Satoshi Mochizuki, Mitsuru Kawamura, Juro Kawachi, Masayoshi Obana
    1999Volume 19Issue 1 Pages 2-8
    Published: 1999
    Released on J-STAGE: April 25, 2006
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
        A 55-year-old right-handed woman, with an infarction of the left anterior cingulate gyrus that encroached upon part of the left supplementary motor area and the truncus of the corpus callosum, showed “compulsive use” phenomenon in the right hand. We examined her symptoms by administering tests under various conditions and by analyzing her introspection written in her diary. During the tests, compulsive use appeared in tactile-and-visual and tactile conditions. However, she did not show compulsive use but pantomimed correctly when the examiner asked her to pantomime in response to seeing an object. She also showed “compulsive pantomime” after hearing an object name. She reported that she felt urged to use the object even when she succeeded in suppressing compulsive use or pantomime. From her diary, we found at least three distinctive ways in which she experienced her problems : (1) compulsive use occurring against her will ; (2) compulsive use derived from an obsessive intent to use the object ; and (3) instantaneous action immediately after thinking about it.
        These phenomena can be explained by introducing the concept of dual mechanism for action-selection formed by intent and will. It is believed that the supplementary motor area generates intent for a particular action, whereas the prefrontal area generates will that decides whether or not to perform an action. Each of these areas independently subserves the selection of an action to be performed. Moreover, will appears to regulate intent. The subject's compulsiveness may result from dysfunction of the mechanism for action-selection, from dysfunction of control of will over intent, or from both.
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  • Naruhiko Maki, Manabu Ikeda, Kazuhiko Hokoishi, Kenjiro Komori, Hirota ...
    1999Volume 19Issue 1 Pages 9-16
    Published: 1999
    Released on J-STAGE: April 25, 2006
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
        We reported a case of a basal forebrain amnesia of a 44-year-old man who exhibited persistent amnesia and changes of personality following surgery on ruptured aneurysm of the anterior communicating artery. He showed disorientation, severe anterograde amnesia, confabulation and euphoria, but neither social or biographical retrograde amnesia. The case was noteworthy in that he had difficulty in recalling famous persons' names in addition to the characteristics of basal forebrain amnesia, whereas he had feeling of knowing and preserved recognition for presented photographs of the famous faces.
        Damasio et al. (1996) proposed that abnormal retrieval of words for persons correlated with damage in the left temporal pole. The (left) temporal pole is combined with the medial frontal cortex including the basal forebrain area with Yakovlev circuit. This case suggests the possibility of damage in the basal forebrain area affect the ability in recalling famous persons' names.
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