Journal

The Japanese journal of neuropsychology

[Vol.37 No.4 contents]
Japanese/English

Full Text of this Article
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ArticleTitle Evolution of brain as clinical symptoms: dystypia instead of agraphia
Language J
AuthorList Mika Otsuki
Affiliation Faculty of Health Sciences, Hokkaido University
Publication Japanese Journal of Neuropsychology: 37 (4), 262-271, 2021
Received
Accepted
Abstract Changes in everyday life in recent years have affected brain localization, for example changes in writing from handwriting to typing on a keyboard. Regarding writing, a new term 'dsytypia' first coined by Otsuki et al. (2002) refers a symptoms of typing impairment which cannot be attributed to aphasia, agraphia, apraxia. The following reports of dystypia have indicated at least two causative lesions; one is frontal lobe involving the foot of the middle frontal gyrus and frontal opereculum, and the other is the parietal lobe. We speculate that dystypia with frontal lobe (frontal dystypia) is caused by the impairment of intermediate process from linguistic information to motor reaction such as typing, and dystypia with parietal lesion (parietal type) by the visuo-spatial impairment. Moreover, a term 'dystextia' which refers to an impairment of texting on a cell phone has appeared. Although dystexia is not well established as a pure neurological symptoms because the reports of dystextia include not only the patients with pure dystexia but also texting impairment due to severe aphasia or apraxia or weakness. However, it would be very important to focus on this symptom in future.
Keywords dystypia, dystextia, typing impairment, agraphia, texting

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