Part I.
Theoretical and methodological foundations of neuropsychology.
Neuropsychological examination, instrumental exams, diagnosis, cerebral plasticity and functional recovery.
Classical associationist and neo-associationist school; modern approaches to anatomo-clinical correlation. Hodotopic framework, which considers both structural lesions (to the grey and white matter) and functional alterations within structurally intact regions. Resting-state functional connectivity in neuropsychology.
Part II.
Classical neuropsychological disorders and syndromes (aphasia, dyslexia and dysgraphia, dyscalculia, apraxia, agnosia, amnesia, attentional and visuo-spatial disorders, body representation disorders, executive syndromes, dementia), disorders of awareness, emotional and psychiatric disorders following acquired brain injuries.
Considerations on how modern approaches to anatomo-clinical correlation, by also integrating the available knowledge from in vivo neuroimaging studies on the healthy brain, affects classical models of neuropsychological disorders.