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The Man Who Mistook His Wife For A Hat Summary

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The Man Who Mistook His Wife For A Hat Summary
2. In this chapter Jenni Ogden describes the case of Michael, a young man who crashed while riding a motorcycle. Afterwards he sustained many injuries to his body and his brain, because of his bodily injuries and Michael’s appearance of normality the doctors focused on his external injuries and did not focus on his brain. Later Michael went blind and was eventually diagnosed with visual object agnosia. Ogden then gives a brief broad history of agnosia and describes the three types: visual, auditory, and somatosensory. Different types of visual agnosia are then mentioned to give the reader a deeper understanding of Michael’s condition. Ogden then illustrates the different neuropsychological evaluations that Michael underwent: he was asked to describe pictures, read, recall …show more content…
P, a man who teaches music at a school and is unable to see or recognize faces. It is difficult for him to see a whole person or picture, instead he focuses on specific elements at a time that allow him to know (for the most part) what he is seeing. Sacks recognizes that Dr. P sees by his ears, he is able to recognize where a person is standing and who is talking to him by the individual’s voice. Dr. P is unable to recognize emotions anon faces, and is only able to tell people apart by noticeable factors such as mustaches or prominent features. Sacks seemed to think Dr. P was lost in a world of lifeless abstractions, but he was still able to maintain and express his intelligence. Chapter 4, is brief, yet is illustrates the experience of a man who fell out of bed because he believed his leg was a corpse’s leg. He awoke and was terrified to find a cadaver leg in bed with him, and when he pushed it off his bed he too fell off, because the offensive leg was actually his. This man was experiencing a complete loss of awareness of his hemiplegic

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