University of Wisconsin–Madison

Category: Marilyn Kay

Prosopagnosia: a double dissociation between the recognition of familiar and unfamiliar faces.

PubMed ID: 7131015 Author(s): Malone DR, Morris HH, Kay MC, Levin HS. Prosopagnosia: a double dissociation between the recognition of familiar and unfamiliar faces. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 1982 Sep;45(9):820-2. Journal: Journal Of Neurology, Neurosurgery, And Psychiatry, Volume 45, Issue 9, Sep 1982 Two cases of a dissociation between prosopagnosia and impaired capacity to match …

Prosopagnosia.

PubMed ID: 7091286 Author(s): Kay MC, Levin HS. Prosopagnosia. Am J Ophthalmol. 1982 Jul;94(1):75-80. Journal: American Journal Of Ophthalmology, Volume 94, Issue 1, Jul 1982 Three patients with prosopagnosia, and acquired inability to recognize familiar faces usually resulting from cerebrovascular insufficiency, had left-sided visual field defects and color vision abnormalities of central origin. Prosopagnosia, although …

Multiple cranial nerve palsies in late metastasis of midline malignant reticulosis.

PubMed ID: 391048 Author(s): Kay MC, McCrary JA. Multiple cranial nerve palsies in late metastasis of midline malignant reticulosis. Am J Ophthalmol. 1979 Dec;88(6):1087-90. Journal: American Journal Of Ophthalmology, Volume 88, Issue 6, Dec 1979 A 12-year-old man had a sudden onset of multiple cranial nerve palsies after treatment for a necrotizing lesion of the …

Orbital hematoma secondary to frontal sinusitis.

PubMed ID: 733182 Author(s): Harris GJ, Kay MC, Nilles JJ. Orbital hematoma secondary to frontal sinusitis. Ophthalmology. 1978 Nov;85(11):1229-34. PMID 733182 Journal: Ophthalmology, Volume 85, Issue 11, Nov 1978 A 30-year-old woman had an orbital hematoma with frontal sinusitis. This complication of infection in the paranasal sinuses has not been previously described, but is explainable …