Portrait of Lord Melvyn Bragg, host of In Our Time

Neuropsychological assessment

Neuropsychological assessment was traditionally carried out to assess the extent of impairment to a particular skill and to attempt to determine the area of the brain which may have been damaged following brain injury or neurological illness. With the advent of neuroimaging techniques, location of space-occupying lesions can now be more accurately determined through this method, so the focus has now moved on to the assessment of cognition and behaviour, including examining the effects of any brain injury or neuropathological process that a person may have experienced.

4 episodes

Episodes in this category also belong to the following categories:

  1. Consciousness

    Melvyn Bragg examines why the elusiveness and impenetrability of consciousness continues to fascinate both philosophers and scientists. Is the human mind just not built to understand its own basis?

    25 November 1999

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    Featuring: Ted Honderich, Roger Penrose

     
  2. Memory

    Melvyn Bragg discusses the significance of memory. Is it a repository of events waiting to be plucked to consciousness?

    29 May 2003

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    Featuring: Martin Conway, Mike Kopelman, Kim Graham

     
  3. Memory and Culture

    Melvyn Bragg discusses how our ways of remembering have changed and explores whether memory itself can remain forever unchanged in its role within our psychology.

    27 May 1999

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    Featuring: Malcolm Bowie, Nancy Wood

     
  4. Perception and the Senses

    Melvyn Bragg discusses perception: how the brain reacts to the mass of data continually crowding it and examines what governs our perception of the world.

    28 April 2005

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    Featuring: Richard Gregory, David Moore, Gemma Calvert