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#anosognosia — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #anosognosia, aggregated by home.social.

  1. DATE: May 14, 2026 at 09:00AM
    SOURCE: PSYCHIATRIC TIMES

    Direct article link at end of text block below.

    An estimated 77,000 individuals with psychotic disorders are in US jails and prisons at any given time.

    This could, in part, be driven by the neurological deficit anosognosia, in which an affected individual is unable to perceive their own illness. t.co/TwTHBjeP99

    Here are any URLs found in the article text:

    t.co/TwTHBjeP99

    Articles can be found by scrolling down the page at Articles can be found at psychiatrictimes.com/news".

    -------------------------------------------------

    DAILY EMAIL DIGEST: Email [email protected] -- no subject or message needed.

    Private, vetted email list for mental health professionals: clinicians-exchange.org

    NYU Information for Practice puts out 400-500 good quality health-related research posts per week but its too much for many people, so that bot is limited to just subscribers. You can read it or subscribe at @PsychResearchBot

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    #psychology #counseling #socialwork #psychotherapy @psychotherapist @psychotherapists @psychology @socialpsych @socialwork @psychiatry #mentalhealth #psychiatry #healthcare #psychotherapist #MentalHealth #CriminalJustice #Anosognosia #PsychoticDisorders #DetentionReform

  2. DATE: May 14, 2026 at 09:00AM
    SOURCE: PSYCHIATRIC TIMES

    Direct article link at end of text block below.

    An estimated 77,000 individuals with psychotic disorders are in US jails and prisons at any given time.

    This could, in part, be driven by the neurological deficit anosognosia, in which an affected individual is unable to perceive their own illness. t.co/TwTHBjeP99

    Here are any URLs found in the article text:

    t.co/TwTHBjeP99

    Articles can be found by scrolling down the page at Articles can be found at psychiatrictimes.com/news".

    -------------------------------------------------

    DAILY EMAIL DIGEST: Email [email protected] -- no subject or message needed.

    Private, vetted email list for mental health professionals: clinicians-exchange.org

    NYU Information for Practice puts out 400-500 good quality health-related research posts per week but its too much for many people, so that bot is limited to just subscribers. You can read it or subscribe at @PsychResearchBot

    -------------------------------------------------

    #psychology #counseling #socialwork #psychotherapy @psychotherapist @psychotherapists @psychology @socialpsych @socialwork @psychiatry #mentalhealth #psychiatry #healthcare #psychotherapist #MentalHealth #CriminalJustice #Anosognosia #PsychoticDisorders #DetentionReform

  3. DATE: May 14, 2026 at 09:00AM
    SOURCE: PSYCHIATRIC TIMES

    Direct article link at end of text block below.

    An estimated 77,000 individuals with psychotic disorders are in US jails and prisons at any given time.

    This could, in part, be driven by the neurological deficit anosognosia, in which an affected individual is unable to perceive their own illness. t.co/TwTHBjeP99

    Here are any URLs found in the article text:

    t.co/TwTHBjeP99

    Articles can be found by scrolling down the page at Articles can be found at psychiatrictimes.com/news".

    -------------------------------------------------

    DAILY EMAIL DIGEST: Email [email protected] -- no subject or message needed.

    Private, vetted email list for mental health professionals: clinicians-exchange.org

    NYU Information for Practice puts out 400-500 good quality health-related research posts per week but its too much for many people, so that bot is limited to just subscribers. You can read it or subscribe at @PsychResearchBot

    -------------------------------------------------

    #psychology #counseling #socialwork #psychotherapy @psychotherapist @psychotherapists @psychology @socialpsych @socialwork @psychiatry #mentalhealth #psychiatry #healthcare #psychotherapist #MentalHealth #CriminalJustice #Anosognosia #PsychoticDisorders #DetentionReform

  4. houstonchronicle.com/news/hous

    >Houston's homelessness strategy, hailed as a success story by other cities, is changing. Here's how.
    >
    >"In Mayor Whitmire's first term, Houston can be the first major city to end street homelessness," it read. The word "can" was crossed out and replaced with the word "will," in italics.
    >
    >He had gathered with city officials, law enforcement officers and nonprofit leaders to outline his plan for how to do so.
    >
    >The press conference was simultaneously a lofty vision statement, a fundraising pitch and a call for legislative changes that could create sustainable sources of funding and make it easier to commit people with mental illnesses who are living on the street.

    Translation: housing the homeless is expensive and not profitable. Incarcerating them, either in jail or in involuntary mental institutions, is profitable. So that's what we'll be doing.

    >Whitmire twice characterized the plan as involving both compassion and enforcement for individuals who may resist housing, citing a recent Supreme Court decision ruling. The nation's highest court ruled that homeless people can be fined and arrested for sleeping in public, even if there isn't a shelter where they could sleep instead.

    The idea that there's an epidemic of homeless people resisting housing is absurd. They're resisting disingenuous efforts that would rather see them disappeared than helped. Also, that SCOTUS ruling will one day be as reviled as Dred Scott.

    >Houston has for years been viewed as a rare success story in the face of growing homeless populations across the country — since 2011, it has cut its annual count of people sleeping in shelters or on the street or in other places not meant for human habitation by more than two thirds. (The count does not include people who lack a home but are staying with friends or in hotels.)
    >
    >But even as officials from other major cities around the nation have made pilgrimages to Houston in the hopes of finding a solution to their soaring homeless populations, many Houstonians have felt frustration with the number of people they see on the streets.

    It's capitalism, you dummies. Or at least, it's treating housing as a commodity first and a human right second. You can't have both. No amount of funding or non-profits or NGO help will ever address the root cause of this problem.

    >"I'm here to declare today, you help the homeless by getting them off the street and reclaiming our public spaces," Whitmire said.

    You help them by housing them.

    >The declaration marked a departure from the strategy taken by the city and its partners for over a decade, which focused limited funds on permanent housing, coupled with caseworkers. Mike Nichols, the city's director of housing and community development, estimated that it cost $23,000 a year to provide such housing, compared with $35,000 a year for each spot provided by the city's navigation center, a place where people stay between when their encampment is shut down and they secure housing.

    So... you're stopping what works, because it's working too well and the capitalists want to get back to business as usual.

    >Houston's homelessness strategy has long depended on influxes of federal disaster funding, such as the funds unleashed by Hurricane Harvey and the pandemic.
    >
    >Now that $150 million of COVID-related funding that had channeled into the region's homelessness response is winding down — at the same time that a budget crunch has caused the Houston Housing Authority to temporarily stop issuing vouchers used to pay for permanent supportive housing — the pace at which people can be moved off the street into housing has slowed.

    I'm happy that they're noticing that you cannot spend your way out of homelessness. I'm unhappy that they don't recognize why: it's not a "lack of funding." It's not "not focusing on mental health." It is, fundamentally, that housing is a commodity rather than a human right. So long as that remains the case, homelessness will not be solved.

    >Satterwhite spoke of people who may refuse housing because "they simply lack the awareness because they suffer from mental health."
    >
    >"We need some law changes to give us more tools," he said. Such a legislative change would be a significant change from current policy, which only allows individuals to be involuntarily committed if they are a risk to their own safety or that of others.
    >
    >Whitmire also said that legislative changes might be needed to create sustainable sources of funding. He pointed to the Harris County Flood Control District, a special purpose district created by the Texas Legislature, and the Harris Health System, created by a voter referendum. Both entities have taxing authority.
    >
    >"Can we imagine maybe having a mental health/homeless (district)?" Whitmire asked.

    So this is where the #anosognosia canard came from. And, as we know from the top of the thread, the #txlege gave cops expanded power to involuntarily detain people. It gave no funding to housing or mental health.

    #homelessness #scotus #Houston #HoustonTX #htx #HoustonChronicle

  5. houstonchronicle.com/news/hous

    >Proponents hope Senate Bill 1164 will allow for interventions before there is an immediate danger — because by then, it can be too late. Walter Macias said he asked the police in San Antonio for help several times before his brother’s psychosis led him to believe that his home, where he lived with his mother, was a fort defending Earth from aliens. The brother, Fernando, told Walter he was buying an AR-15 to prepare for the invasion.
    >
    >When the police arrived to detain him on a mental health warrant, Fernando opened fire, leading to a 25-hour standoff. Their mother was killed by the state SWAT team in the crossfire, and Fernando was taken to jail, where he lost more than 100 pounds and died after not receiving dialysis for months, according to a wrongful death suit.
    >
    >“This bill would’ve saved my family’s tragedy,” Walter Macias said. He said he’d reached out to authorities periodically for two decades before the incident and that the realization that the law couldn’t do anything had left him feeling helpless.

    Really? You trust that the same system that murdered your mother and starved your brother would behave differently with this new legislation because... what? Because they have a new excuse for involuntary commitment on top of the ones they already have?

    This is nothing more than a pretext to round up people and throw them into concentration camps under the guise of "they don't realize they are ill."

    >By 2024, James Caruthers, director of public affairs at the Coalition for the Homeless in Houston and Harris County, had noticed what he called “a groundswell to say mental health and homelessness are almost inseparable … and we have to be a lot more draconian.”
    >
    >Conservative think tanks, like the Cicero Institute and Texas Public Policy Foundation, had begun calling for the nation’s homeless strategy to shift from a focus on housing to a focus on treating mental illness and substance abuse. The Cicero Institute explicitly urged states to amend civil commitment laws “to make it easier to help those who cannot help themselves.”

    They're not even speaking in coded language here, y'all. This has nothing to do with mental health and everything to do with stopping what works --- housing first --- and starting round-ups.

    >A group of psychiatrists, law professors, judges (including one whom Pope Francis had recognized for his work involving involuntary treatment) and others had just spent three years examining the same question. The Model Legal Processes Work Group concluded that states should include anosognosia as part of their commitment criteria, but that such changes would have to be made alongside investments in housing and quality mental health treatment services for the system to work.
    >
    >...
    >
    >The bill authored by Zaffirini did not, however, go as far as to add funding for housing or mental health treatment services.

    Surprise surprise, SB 1164 doesn't do shit for housing *or* treatment (capitol.texas.gov/tlodocs/89R/). It's purely a mechanism for throwing people away.

    >“There are a lot of people in Houston that are praising your work on this. I know that you have worked very closely with HPD and stakeholders that are trying to end homelessness. I know this has been a priority of Mayor Whitmire, our former colleague. So, on behalf of many organizations in Houston, thank you and your team for all the work and your efforts.”

    Calling HPD a "stakeholder" in this process is insulting. They're the enforcers tasked with sweeping the homeless.

    >Moving forward, he said, the nation would have to make sure that it wasn’t just providing housing.
    >
    >“(We need to make sure) we’re providing for those who have mental illness, those that have addiction. And so I’m very encouraged by what I see here today.”

    But y'all aren't even providing the housing to start with! What you are building are concentration camps, plain and simple. And folks' classism and disgust for the homeless are making it all possible.

    #deia #homelessness #InvoluntaryCommitment #5150 #MentalIllness #txlege #HoustonChronicle #ableism #HoustonTX #Houston #htx #anosognosia #MentalHealth

  6. houstonchronicle.com/news/hous

    >Proponents hope Senate Bill 1164 will allow for interventions before there is an immediate danger — because by then, it can be too late. Walter Macias said he asked the police in San Antonio for help several times before his brother’s psychosis led him to believe that his home, where he lived with his mother, was a fort defending Earth from aliens. The brother, Fernando, told Walter he was buying an AR-15 to prepare for the invasion.
    >
    >When the police arrived to detain him on a mental health warrant, Fernando opened fire, leading to a 25-hour standoff. Their mother was killed by the state SWAT team in the crossfire, and Fernando was taken to jail, where he lost more than 100 pounds and died after not receiving dialysis for months, according to a wrongful death suit.
    >
    >“This bill would’ve saved my family’s tragedy,” Walter Macias said. He said he’d reached out to authorities periodically for two decades before the incident and that the realization that the law couldn’t do anything had left him feeling helpless.

    Really? You trust that the same system that murdered your mother and starved your brother would behave differently with this new legislation because... what? Because they have a new excuse for involuntary commitment on top of the ones they already have?

    This is nothing more than a pretext to round up people and throw them into concentration camps under the guise of "they don't realize they are ill."

    >By 2024, James Caruthers, director of public affairs at the Coalition for the Homeless in Houston and Harris County, had noticed what he called “a groundswell to say mental health and homelessness are almost inseparable … and we have to be a lot more draconian.”
    >
    >Conservative think tanks, like the Cicero Institute and Texas Public Policy Foundation, had begun calling for the nation’s homeless strategy to shift from a focus on housing to a focus on treating mental illness and substance abuse. The Cicero Institute explicitly urged states to amend civil commitment laws “to make it easier to help those who cannot help themselves.”

    They're not even speaking in coded language here, y'all. This has nothing to do with mental health and everything to do with stopping what works --- housing first --- and starting round-ups.

    >A group of psychiatrists, law professors, judges (including one whom Pope Francis had recognized for his work involving involuntary treatment) and others had just spent three years examining the same question. The Model Legal Processes Work Group concluded that states should include anosognosia as part of their commitment criteria, but that such changes would have to be made alongside investments in housing and quality mental health treatment services for the system to work.
    >
    >...
    >
    >The bill authored by Zaffirini did not, however, go as far as to add funding for housing or mental health treatment services.

    Surprise surprise, SB 1164 doesn't do shit for housing *or* treatment (capitol.texas.gov/tlodocs/89R/). It's purely a mechanism for throwing people away.

    >“There are a lot of people in Houston that are praising your work on this. I know that you have worked very closely with HPD and stakeholders that are trying to end homelessness. I know this has been a priority of Mayor Whitmire, our former colleague. So, on behalf of many organizations in Houston, thank you and your team for all the work and your efforts.”

    Calling HPD a "stakeholder" in this process is insulting. They're the enforcers tasked with sweeping the homeless.

    >Moving forward, he said, the nation would have to make sure that it wasn’t just providing housing.
    >
    >“(We need to make sure) we’re providing for those who have mental illness, those that have addiction. And so I’m very encouraged by what I see here today.”

    But y'all aren't even providing the housing to start with! What you are building are concentration camps, plain and simple. And folks' classism and disgust for the homeless are making it all possible.

    #deia #homelessness #InvoluntaryCommitment #5150 #MentalIllness #txlege #HoustonChronicle #ableism #HoustonTX #Houston #htx #anosognosia #MentalHealth

  7. houstonchronicle.com/news/hous

    >Proponents hope Senate Bill 1164 will allow for interventions before there is an immediate danger — because by then, it can be too late. Walter Macias said he asked the police in San Antonio for help several times before his brother’s psychosis led him to believe that his home, where he lived with his mother, was a fort defending Earth from aliens. The brother, Fernando, told Walter he was buying an AR-15 to prepare for the invasion.
    >
    >When the police arrived to detain him on a mental health warrant, Fernando opened fire, leading to a 25-hour standoff. Their mother was killed by the state SWAT team in the crossfire, and Fernando was taken to jail, where he lost more than 100 pounds and died after not receiving dialysis for months, according to a wrongful death suit.
    >
    >“This bill would’ve saved my family’s tragedy,” Walter Macias said. He said he’d reached out to authorities periodically for two decades before the incident and that the realization that the law couldn’t do anything had left him feeling helpless.

    Really? You trust that the same system that murdered your mother and starved your brother would behave differently with this new legislation because... what? Because they have a new excuse for involuntary commitment on top of the ones they already have?

    This is nothing more than a pretext to round up people and throw them into concentration camps under the guise of "they don't realize they are ill."

    >By 2024, James Caruthers, director of public affairs at the Coalition for the Homeless in Houston and Harris County, had noticed what he called “a groundswell to say mental health and homelessness are almost inseparable … and we have to be a lot more draconian.”
    >
    >Conservative think tanks, like the Cicero Institute and Texas Public Policy Foundation, had begun calling for the nation’s homeless strategy to shift from a focus on housing to a focus on treating mental illness and substance abuse. The Cicero Institute explicitly urged states to amend civil commitment laws “to make it easier to help those who cannot help themselves.”

    They're not even speaking in coded language here, y'all. This has nothing to do with mental health and everything to do with stopping what works --- housing first --- and starting round-ups.

    >A group of psychiatrists, law professors, judges (including one whom Pope Francis had recognized for his work involving involuntary treatment) and others had just spent three years examining the same question. The Model Legal Processes Work Group concluded that states should include anosognosia as part of their commitment criteria, but that such changes would have to be made alongside investments in housing and quality mental health treatment services for the system to work.
    >
    >...
    >
    >The bill authored by Zaffirini did not, however, go as far as to add funding for housing or mental health treatment services.

    Surprise surprise, SB 1164 doesn't do shit for housing *or* treatment (capitol.texas.gov/tlodocs/89R/). It's purely a mechanism for throwing people away.

    >“There are a lot of people in Houston that are praising your work on this. I know that you have worked very closely with HPD and stakeholders that are trying to end homelessness. I know this has been a priority of Mayor Whitmire, our former colleague. So, on behalf of many organizations in Houston, thank you and your team for all the work and your efforts.”

    Calling HPD a "stakeholder" in this process is insulting. They're the enforcers tasked with sweeping the homeless.

    >Moving forward, he said, the nation would have to make sure that it wasn’t just providing housing.
    >
    >“(We need to make sure) we’re providing for those who have mental illness, those that have addiction. And so I’m very encouraged by what I see here today.”

    But y'all aren't even providing the housing to start with! What you are building are concentration camps, plain and simple. And folks' classism and disgust for the homeless are making it all possible.

    #deia #homelessness #InvoluntaryCommitment #5150 #MentalIllness #txlege #HoustonChronicle #ableism #HoustonTX #Houston #htx #anosognosia #MentalHealth

  8. houstonchronicle.com/news/hous

    >Proponents hope Senate Bill 1164 will allow for interventions before there is an immediate danger — because by then, it can be too late. Walter Macias said he asked the police in San Antonio for help several times before his brother’s psychosis led him to believe that his home, where he lived with his mother, was a fort defending Earth from aliens. The brother, Fernando, told Walter he was buying an AR-15 to prepare for the invasion.
    >
    >When the police arrived to detain him on a mental health warrant, Fernando opened fire, leading to a 25-hour standoff. Their mother was killed by the state SWAT team in the crossfire, and Fernando was taken to jail, where he lost more than 100 pounds and died after not receiving dialysis for months, according to a wrongful death suit.
    >
    >“This bill would’ve saved my family’s tragedy,” Walter Macias said. He said he’d reached out to authorities periodically for two decades before the incident and that the realization that the law couldn’t do anything had left him feeling helpless.

    Really? You trust that the same system that murdered your mother and starved your brother would behave differently with this new legislation because... what? Because they have a new excuse for involuntary commitment on top of the ones they already have?

    This is nothing more than a pretext to round up people and throw them into concentration camps under the guise of "they don't realize they are ill."

    >By 2024, James Caruthers, director of public affairs at the Coalition for the Homeless in Houston and Harris County, had noticed what he called “a groundswell to say mental health and homelessness are almost inseparable … and we have to be a lot more draconian.”
    >
    >Conservative think tanks, like the Cicero Institute and Texas Public Policy Foundation, had begun calling for the nation’s homeless strategy to shift from a focus on housing to a focus on treating mental illness and substance abuse. The Cicero Institute explicitly urged states to amend civil commitment laws “to make it easier to help those who cannot help themselves.”

    They're not even speaking in coded language here, y'all. This has nothing to do with mental health and everything to do with stopping what works --- housing first --- and starting round-ups.

    >A group of psychiatrists, law professors, judges (including one whom Pope Francis had recognized for his work involving involuntary treatment) and others had just spent three years examining the same question. The Model Legal Processes Work Group concluded that states should include anosognosia as part of their commitment criteria, but that such changes would have to be made alongside investments in housing and quality mental health treatment services for the system to work.
    >
    >...
    >
    >The bill authored by Zaffirini did not, however, go as far as to add funding for housing or mental health treatment services.

    Surprise surprise, SB 1164 doesn't do shit for housing *or* treatment (capitol.texas.gov/tlodocs/89R/). It's purely a mechanism for throwing people away.

    >“There are a lot of people in Houston that are praising your work on this. I know that you have worked very closely with HPD and stakeholders that are trying to end homelessness. I know this has been a priority of Mayor Whitmire, our former colleague. So, on behalf of many organizations in Houston, thank you and your team for all the work and your efforts.”

    Calling HPD a "stakeholder" in this process is insulting. They're the enforcers tasked with sweeping the homeless.

    >Moving forward, he said, the nation would have to make sure that it wasn’t just providing housing.
    >
    >“(We need to make sure) we’re providing for those who have mental illness, those that have addiction. And so I’m very encouraged by what I see here today.”

    But y'all aren't even providing the housing to start with! What you are building are concentration camps, plain and simple. And folks' classism and disgust for the homeless are making it all possible.

    #deia #homelessness #InvoluntaryCommitment #5150 #MentalIllness #txlege #HoustonChronicle #ableism #HoustonTX #Houston #htx #anosognosia #MentalHealth

  9. houstonchronicle.com/news/hous

    >Proponents hope Senate Bill 1164 will allow for interventions before there is an immediate danger — because by then, it can be too late. Walter Macias said he asked the police in San Antonio for help several times before his brother’s psychosis led him to believe that his home, where he lived with his mother, was a fort defending Earth from aliens. The brother, Fernando, told Walter he was buying an AR-15 to prepare for the invasion.
    >
    >When the police arrived to detain him on a mental health warrant, Fernando opened fire, leading to a 25-hour standoff. Their mother was killed by the state SWAT team in the crossfire, and Fernando was taken to jail, where he lost more than 100 pounds and died after not receiving dialysis for months, according to a wrongful death suit.
    >
    >“This bill would’ve saved my family’s tragedy,” Walter Macias said. He said he’d reached out to authorities periodically for two decades before the incident and that the realization that the law couldn’t do anything had left him feeling helpless.

    Really? You trust that the same system that murdered your mother and starved your brother would behave differently with this new legislation because... what? Because they have a new excuse for involuntary commitment on top of the ones they already have?

    This is nothing more than a pretext to round up people and throw them into concentration camps under the guise of "they don't realize they are ill."

    >By 2024, James Caruthers, director of public affairs at the Coalition for the Homeless in Houston and Harris County, had noticed what he called “a groundswell to say mental health and homelessness are almost inseparable … and we have to be a lot more draconian.”
    >
    >Conservative think tanks, like the Cicero Institute and Texas Public Policy Foundation, had begun calling for the nation’s homeless strategy to shift from a focus on housing to a focus on treating mental illness and substance abuse. The Cicero Institute explicitly urged states to amend civil commitment laws “to make it easier to help those who cannot help themselves.”

    They're not even speaking in coded language here, y'all. This has nothing to do with mental health and everything to do with stopping what works --- housing first --- and starting round-ups.

    >A group of psychiatrists, law professors, judges (including one whom Pope Francis had recognized for his work involving involuntary treatment) and others had just spent three years examining the same question. The Model Legal Processes Work Group concluded that states should include anosognosia as part of their commitment criteria, but that such changes would have to be made alongside investments in housing and quality mental health treatment services for the system to work.
    >
    >...
    >
    >The bill authored by Zaffirini did not, however, go as far as to add funding for housing or mental health treatment services.

    Surprise surprise, SB 1164 doesn't do shit for housing *or* treatment (capitol.texas.gov/tlodocs/89R/). It's purely a mechanism for throwing people away.

    >“There are a lot of people in Houston that are praising your work on this. I know that you have worked very closely with HPD and stakeholders that are trying to end homelessness. I know this has been a priority of Mayor Whitmire, our former colleague. So, on behalf of many organizations in Houston, thank you and your team for all the work and your efforts.”

    Calling HPD a "stakeholder" in this process is insulting. They're the enforcers tasked with sweeping the homeless.

    >Moving forward, he said, the nation would have to make sure that it wasn’t just providing housing.
    >
    >“(We need to make sure) we’re providing for those who have mental illness, those that have addiction. And so I’m very encouraged by what I see here today.”

    But y'all aren't even providing the housing to start with! What you are building are concentration camps, plain and simple. And folks' classism and disgust for the homeless are making it all possible.

    #deia #homelessness #InvoluntaryCommitment #5150 #MentalIllness #txlege #HoustonChronicle #ableism #HoustonTX #Houston #htx #anosognosia #MentalHealth

  10. When visual metacognition fails: widespread #anosognosia for visual deficits cell.com/trends/cognitive-scie by @isaiah et al.; could sensory substitution help inform the metacognitive system of perceptual errors?

    "The central idea is that, to notice a deficit, individuals need to form expectations about normal vision, compare expectations and visual input, and judge any mismatch at the metacognitive level."

    More information in the Twitter/X thread x.com/IsaiahNeurology/status/1

  11. Is this why #Trump is talking about & touting his MoCA (Montreal Cognitive Assessment) test result? Does he know he's cognitively impaired? If not, that's #anosognosia. His words (confusion/repetition): “By the way, they never report the crowd on Jan. 6. You know Nikki Haley, Nikki Haley, Nikki Haley. You know they—do you know they destroyed all of the information, all of the evidence, everything, deleted and destroyed all of it. All of it,” the former president said.

    forbes.com/sites/ariannajohnso

  12. Network localization of awareness in visual and motor #anosognosia onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/ab "distinct network connections associated with visual and motor anosognosia and a shared, cross-modal network for awareness of deficits centered on memory-related brain structures"; #crossmodal #neuroscience

  13. @mau Solitamente si tratta di di persone affette soprattutto da #anosognosia