The cranial nerves that control eye movement
What are the oculomotor (III), trochlear (IV), and abducens (VI) nerves?
The injury where the skul is injured and the skull changes shape from an oval to a more circular shape
The three orientations that one measures after a person comes out of a coma
What is person, place, and time?
What type of attention is treated when the patient is completing a time-monitoring task while also engaging in a comprehension exercise
The cranial nerve that if affected when one has Bell's Palsy?
What is the facial (VII) nerve?
The neurons that carry nerve impulses from the central nervous system and to the muscle for motoric function
What is efferent neurons?
The tearing and shearing of axons, causing to form an axonal bulb, where the axons eventually seperate from one another
What is diffuse axonal injury?
What are attention, encoding, storage, and retrieval?
The type of memory does errorless learning depend on
What is procedural memory?
The way alcoholism is denoted in medical charts
What is ETOH?
The cranial nerve responsible for the secretions of the parotid gland
What is the glossopharyngeal (IX) nerve?
The accumulation of blood between the dura mater and skull; usually caused by skull fractures that lacerate arterial channels in skull
What is an epidural hematoma?
The type of attention that the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test tests
What is alternating attention?
The goal of prospective memory training?
What is to increase the intervening delay?
The type of memory problem where you are convinced you are seeing a double
What is reduplicative paramnesia?
The cranial nerves responsible for taste sensations
What is the facial and glossopharyngeal and vagus nerve?
A type of secondary injruy to an TBI that is swelling of brain tissue (esp the midbrain)
What is traumatic hydrocephalus?
The area of the brain that when damaged one can not process declarative memories but can lay down procedural memories
What is the hippocampus?
What is the memory treatment that teaches awareness via an educational approach and tracking performance through self-monitor and behavioral logs
What is metamemory training?
Cranial nerve that if damaged causes autonomic functions and visceral reflexes (like heart rate, vomiting, coughing, sneezing) to be affected
What is the vagus (X) nerve?
The disorder that causes recurrent, sudden episodes of pain in the face, head and oral cavity
What is Trigeminal Neurolagia?
A type of acceleration injury that causes anosmia and tinnitus?
What is front-to-back injury?
The type of memory that is tested when you ask a patient "You were supposed to tell me something?"
What is prospective memory?
The type of attention that the Flanker Task is measuring
What is selective attention?
The type of dysphagia that is common in Parkinson's Disease?
What is hypokinetic?