a Department of Psychology , King's College London, Institute of Psychiatry , London , UK.
Cogn Neurosci. 2013;4(3-4):181-97. doi: 10.1080/17588928.2013.833899.
Unawareness of deficits caused by brain damage or neurodegeneration, termed anosognosia, has been demonstrated in a number of different neurological conditions. Clinical observation suggests that unawareness paradoxically can be accompanied by signs of understanding or representation of deficit, but not explicitly expressed. Such "implicit awareness," an apparent oxymoron, is implied by or inferred from actions or statements of the person with neurological disorder. In the current paper, we review clinical observations and experimental evidence which suggest the occurrence of implicit awareness in dementia and hemiplegia, and explore the clinical and theoretical implications of this phenomenon. We present a theoretical framework to understand implicit awareness in these two conditions.
对脑损伤或神经退行性疾病引起的缺陷的无意识,即否认症,已在许多不同的神经疾病中得到证实。临床观察表明,无意识可以奇怪地伴随着对缺陷的理解或表现的迹象,但没有明确表达。这种“内隐意识”,一个明显的矛盾修饰语,是由神经障碍患者的行为或陈述暗示或推断出来的。在本文中,我们回顾了临床观察和实验证据,这些证据表明在痴呆症和偏瘫中存在内隐意识,并探讨了这一现象的临床和理论意义。我们提出了一个理论框架来理解这两种情况下的内隐意识。