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Neurological disorder quizlet
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Jean-Dominique Bauby was born in Paris France on April 23rd 1952, he had two children a son named Theophile and a daughter named Celeste. After working as a journalist for The Quotidien de Paris and Paris Match magazine for four years, in 1991 Bauby had finally became a well known author, journalists and editor in chief of a French fashion magazine called Elle. As Bauby quickly made his way to the top of the corporate ladder his dreams were suddenly shattered.
On December 8th, 1995 at the age of forty three Bauby had a stroke and fell into an induced coma for twenty days. After being in a coma for twenty days, Bauby awoke only to discover that his entire body was paralyzed leaving him unable to speak, eat, breath or move on his own. Bauby later found out that he had suffered from a brain stem stroke and as a result had fallen victim to a rare disorder called locked-in syndrome. Soon after Bauby discovered that he was at risk of developing an infection, in order to prevent the infection from spreading doctors had sewn Bauby’s right eyelid shut leaving him with only his left eye.
Unable to move or communicate and tired of feeling helpless and having to rely on others, Bauby routinely met up with a speech therapist and developed his own method of communication. By using the only functioning body part he had left, his left eye this became Bauby’s only means of communicating with those around him. With this method of communication Bauby would work with a speech therapist in Partner-assisted scanning or listener-assisted scanning. During these meetings Bauby’s speech therapist would slowly recite each letter of the alphabet to him aloud or point to each letter on a screen. When the letter he wanted to use was said aloud or pointed to B...
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MALLON, THOMAS. "After a Devastating Stroke, the Author Dictated This Memoir Using Only His Left Eyelid." In the Blink of an Eye. New York times, 15 June 1997. Web. 11 Dec. 2013. .
Rio, Chris, Dustin Koski, Ben Denny, and Sampsa Nuotio. "The 6 Most Certifiably Insane Acts of Writing." Cracked.com. N.p., 18 Aug. 2012. Web. 11 Dec. 2013. .
Robinson, Tasha. "Book Vs. Film: The Diving Bell And The Butterfly • The A.V. Club." Book Vs. Film: The Diving Bell And The Butterfly • The A.V. Club. N.p., 11 Jan. 2008. Web. 18 Dec. 2013. .
Macartney-Filgate, Terence. Timothy Findley: Anatomy of a Writer. National Film Board of Canada, Toronto: 1992.
Louise Bourgeiois was born in Paris in 1911 and lived in New York until her death in 2010. Much of her artwork was inspired from her early childhood that she spent in France. The human body was Burgoeiois primary form of art, as she made multipe sculptures
In 1983, Nancy Beth Cruzan lapsed into an irreversible coma from an auto accident in Jasper County, Missouri. Cruzan was discovered lying face down in a ditch without detectable respiratory or cardiac function. Paramedics were able to restore her breathing and heartbeat at the accident site, and she was transported to a hospital in an unconscious state. An attending neurosurgeon diagnosed her as having sustained cerebral injuries combined with significant lack of oxygen. The estimated length of the period without oxygen was twelve to fourteen minutes. (Permanent brain damage generally results after six minutes without oxygen.) After the accident Nancy was not breathing on her own and was connected to a machine, five days later she was breathing on her own and the respirator was disconnected. She remained in a coma for approximately three weeks and then progressed to an unconscious state in which she was able to orally ingest some nutrition. She was moved out of ICU into a private room where the family tried on a daily basis to get a response. In order to ease feeding and further the recovery, surgeons implanted a gastrostomy feeding and hydration tube in Cruzan with the consent of her then husband. Nancy's parents Joe (Lester) and Joyce stayed at the hospital around the clock sleeping on couches and chairs. Her sister Chris visited as much as she could while her two daughters Miranda and Angie were in school. Nancy and Chris were be...
Lane, Harlan; Hoffmeister, Rob and Bahan, Ben (1996). A Journey Into the DEAF-WORLD. Dawn Sign Press, San Diego, Ca.
At this time in history, those who were deaf were tried at best to be converted into hearing people. Doctors, speech therapists, and audiologists all recommended the use of speaking and lip reading instead of sign language. Since Mark’s grandparents were hearing, they were closer to the parental position instead of his deaf parents. His grandparents provided him with the best possible education he could get, startin...
For those who are not familiar with Mr. Bauby , he was a former general editor of Elle magazine Parisian version . Bauby lived a life full of women , fashion and writing. In his heyday , he toyed with the adaptation of Alexandre Dumas classic tale The Count of Monte - Cristo . He says in the book that "revenge of course was remain the driving force of the action, but the plot takes place in our time, and Monte Cristo a woman." Bauby a man of culture and romance. However at the young age of 43, Bauby suffered a massive stroke that left him in a coma for twenty days. On waking , he found himself mentally sound , but he lost control of his body. He suffered from a rare condition known as locked -in syndrome , which leaves the body paralyzed but brain functioning at maximum capacity .
In Ithaca, New York there is a 7-year-old autistic boy who only spoke to his parents (e.g. I want drink.) Once he was introduced to a horse and an i pad in a special program called Strides. Luke, in an eight-week program using his i pad was able to have his first two-way conversation. He was able to communicate feelings, and express to his friends about how he lost his first tooth. In just this eight-week program Luke is on a whole different playing field when it comes to communication with the help of a tablet.
Jean-Paul Sartre was born on June 21, 1905, and lost his father a little over a year later. His mother, Anne-Marie was raised uneducated in an educated family and moved back in with her own father, the teacher Karl Schweitzer, uncle of the famous philosopher and missionary, Albert Schweitzer. She promptly lost control of her infant son. Jean-Paul became the immediate favorite of his g...
Spradley, T. S., & Spradley, J. P. (1978). Deaf Like Me. Washington, DC: Gallaudet University.
Eugene-Henri-Paul Gauguin was born on June 7, 1848 in Paris, France Compton’s Encyclopedia 1). When Napoleon destroyed France’s Second Republic, Gauguin’s father, Clovis, an anti-Bonaparte journalist, moved his family to Lima, Peru. On the way to Peru, Clovis died of a heart attack, leaving his wife to support two small children, Paul being the youngest (Harmon 2).
Fast forward to the year 1813 in Hartford, Connecticut; a young man by the name of Thomas Gallaudet notices a young deaf girl, Alice Cogswell, having difficulty communicating with her siblings during outdoor play. Sympathetic to her disability, he takes the initiative to try to communicate with her by writing a word in the dirt with a stick, then pointing to the object that correlated to the written word. After patient encouragement the words were soon understood by the young girl, and “In that one afternoon, Gallaudet was convinced that she had the capability to learn just like the hearing kids” (33).
Jean Piaget (1896-1980) was born in Neuchatel, Switzerland. His father modelled an ardent commitment to his studies, a characteristic that Piaget followed from an early age. Piaget was known to have described his mother as being inclined to regular neurotic outbursts.
In Saumur, France on August 19, 1883, Gabrielle Bonheur Chanel was born. At the time of her birth, her parents were not married but they did exchange vows when Ms. Chanel was
What’s the first thing you do when you get up in the morning? For most it would be waking to the sound of their alarm clock, but what happens if you cannot hear? What if you are deaf? The purpose of this paper is to explain and define American Sign Language (ASL), how it is used and who uses it. I will inform you about the origins of ASL, how it started the first deaf school. I will discuss people who influence ASL, and how ASL has changed over time, and I will also include interesting facts and weird signs.
Methods: First we will check which velar sounds mrs. K. can produce better than the others. After that, we will do articulation exercises. We will train syllables in a CV order and words in CVC-order, but soon we will train syllables and words with clusters to make it more difficult. Mrs. K. has a moderate flaccid dysarthria, so we think that she can manage it to train in the beginning with complex words. That way, she will also have a higher chance of transfer to CVC-words (Maas et al., 2008, p. 2). The words we will use in therapy are extracted from the book “The Gruffalo” (Donaldson, 1999). If she can pronounce the words correctly on word level, we will try to produce small sentences with these words, so mrs. K. will be able to read this book to her grandchildren after six weeks. We will also train other words concerning her environment; names of her loved ones and things she likes to do. Every week, we will give mrs. K. some homework and try to involve the family. In that way, we hope for a transfer, so mrs. K. can apply the speech movements she learned in therapy into her daily life.