Sabtu, 08 Oktober 2011

Do you Know AMNESIA ?

DO YOU KNOW AMNESIA ?




Amnesia or memory loss is, the failure to recall the information in memory that can take place within a short time, and place in a prolonged, especially with ideas that must be expressed in words.
Amnesia can also take place defenitif, a fixed or lost forever. Nature can be part / partial loss of memory, but can also be total, ie the whole consciousness of the past disappear altogether, or disturbed in total, and can not remember.
Sometimes the amnesia that can take place periodically or regularly. In the event apoplexy (Commotion cerebri) and injury to the brain, amnesia is often the case. So nothing to do with the physical brain disorders that cause amnesia. But some cases, psychological disturbances also play an important role as a cause of amnesia, such as depression, and repression.
Some types of amnesia that we know as below:

 Retrograde amnesia
The loss of memory of events and all matters of which precedes an accident (retrograde = backward). All impression of the past, before the crash disappears, and can not be recalled in memory. Usually lasts a short.

Anterograde amnesia
Anterograde amnesia is lost memory of events immediately after the accident occurred, ie after the occurrence of shock, apoplexy or a confusing time. Memory loss can also be caused by depression and regression.

Amnesia Auditorer
Auditorer amnesia is the inability to know the words spoken by someone else. Also called word deafness / word-deafness.

Retro-anterograde amnesia
This type of amnesia is the player-feedback information, or memory, in the new events that took place associated with the past, and is regarded as an event that streak (continued), or the events associated with long time now.

Amnesia Tactile
Amnesia is the ability to recognize tactile objects back through palpation. Known also as astereognosis or astere-cognosy

Visual Amnesia
Visual amnesia is amnesia or the inability to know things through the eyes of sensory organs, such as words, inability to recall the words written or spoken, or the objects he had seen before.