Weissenstein, Anne; Luchter, Elisabeth; Bittmann, M.A. Stefan (2014). "Alice in Wonderland syndrome: A rare neurological manifestation with microscopy in a 6-year-old child". Journal of Pediatric Neurosciences. 9 (3): 303–304. ...
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland representsthe child's struggle to survive in the confusing world of adults. To understand our adult world, Alice has to overcome the open-mindedness that is characteristic for children. What mental illness does Alice in Wonderland have? zooming at some topics of...
In 1955 psychiatristJohn Toddsuggested the name “the syndrome of Alice in Wonderland” to refer to a handful of cases involving these perceptual disturbances. In most of those cases, the person suffered from migraines or epilepsy—or both. In fact, Todd citedLewis’s own history of migraines ...
this time; not only physical restraints, but also mental restraints, such as their imaginations'. Carroll was no stranger to this ideal or the likes of this concept; In fact, he constructed Alice in The Wonderland with this in mind, to defy the imaginative 'norm' of Victorian-Era England...
Alice in Wonderland syndrome is not an indication of mental illness or cerebrovascular disease. How is Alice in Wonderland syndrome diagnosed? The first step in diagnosing Alice in Wonderland syndrome is athorough patient examination and interview. This allows the physician to learn more about the...
She chases after him, down a rabbit hole to a strange land full of exotic creatures, like the Mad Hatter and March Hare, a smiling Cheshire cat, a philosophical caterpillar, and a tempermental croquet-playing queen. Alice can hardly keep track of all the curious characters, let alone ...
Journal of Nervous & Mental DiseaseSCHILDER, PAUL. Psychoanalytic remarks on Alice in Wonderland and Lewis Carroll. J. Nerv. Ment. Dis., 87:159-68, Feb., 1938.Paul Schilder, "Psychoanalytic remarks on `Alice in Wonderland' and Lewis Carroll," in Dynamic Psychopathology of Childhood, ed. ...
The "Alice in Wonderland syndrome includes an array of symptoms involving altered perception of shape (meta-morphopsia) of objects or persons who appear to be smaller (micropsia) or larger (macropsia) than normal, of impaired sense of passage of time, of zooming of the environment. This unus...
She chases after him, down a rabbit hole to a strange land full of exotic creatures, like the Mad Hatter and March Hare, a smiling Cheshire cat, a philosophical caterpillar, and a tempermental croquet-playing queen. Alice can hardly keep track of all the curious chara... (展开全部) 我...
Alice in Wonderland Syndrome is defined as the experience of transient distortions of body image that can occur rarely in the context of migraine attacks or as an epileptic phenomenon. AI generated definition based on: Pediatric Neurology, 2007 ...