We compared the performance in a picture-name matching task of 10 patients suffering from left cerebral hemisphere (LH) damage and 10 from right hemisphere (RH) damage. The tasks showed detailed figures of nonrigid objects (animals) and rigid objects (artefacts), and each object was shown in two separate views: a noncanonical view (an unusual perspective for rigid objects or a contorted pose for the nonrigid ones) and a canonical view (a typical perspective and pose). Patients with LH damage were specifically impaired in identifying noncanonical (contorted) poses of nonrigid objects (animals). In a second picture-name matching experiment, using the divided visual field technique, normal subjects matched names to images of nonrigid shapes (a...
Neurobiological theories of knowledge processing are biased toward the language-dominant (usually th...
Abstract--Words, familiar faces and unfamiliar faces were tachistoscopically presented in lateral vi...
Abstract-How do people recognize objects when they face in a novel lateral (left/right) orientation?...
We compared the performance in a picture-name matching task of 10 patients suffering from left cereb...
The dissociation between object identity and object orientation recently observed in five patients w...
The dissociation between object identity and object orientation observed in six patients with brain ...
Three experiments were conducted to test the theoretical distinctions between the types of perceptua...
Schemas are abstract nonverbal representations that parsimoniously depict spatial relations. Despite...
To test whether the two hemispheres process orientation (a dorsal system task) and shape (a ventral ...
Humans and rhesus monkeys can identify shapes that have been rotated in the picture plane. Recogniti...
Hemispheric differences in the learning and generalization of pattern categories were explored in tw...
The dissociable neural subsystems theory proposes that left-hemisphere (LH) performance is dominated...
Patients with visual object agnosia fail to recognize the identity of visually presented objects des...
Stankiewicz, Hummel, and Cooper (1998) proposed that detailed coding of part-whole relations for obj...
In a series of three experiments the hemispheric lateralization of structures generating the details...
Neurobiological theories of knowledge processing are biased toward the language-dominant (usually th...
Abstract--Words, familiar faces and unfamiliar faces were tachistoscopically presented in lateral vi...
Abstract-How do people recognize objects when they face in a novel lateral (left/right) orientation?...
We compared the performance in a picture-name matching task of 10 patients suffering from left cereb...
The dissociation between object identity and object orientation recently observed in five patients w...
The dissociation between object identity and object orientation observed in six patients with brain ...
Three experiments were conducted to test the theoretical distinctions between the types of perceptua...
Schemas are abstract nonverbal representations that parsimoniously depict spatial relations. Despite...
To test whether the two hemispheres process orientation (a dorsal system task) and shape (a ventral ...
Humans and rhesus monkeys can identify shapes that have been rotated in the picture plane. Recogniti...
Hemispheric differences in the learning and generalization of pattern categories were explored in tw...
The dissociable neural subsystems theory proposes that left-hemisphere (LH) performance is dominated...
Patients with visual object agnosia fail to recognize the identity of visually presented objects des...
Stankiewicz, Hummel, and Cooper (1998) proposed that detailed coding of part-whole relations for obj...
In a series of three experiments the hemispheric lateralization of structures generating the details...
Neurobiological theories of knowledge processing are biased toward the language-dominant (usually th...
Abstract--Words, familiar faces and unfamiliar faces were tachistoscopically presented in lateral vi...
Abstract-How do people recognize objects when they face in a novel lateral (left/right) orientation?...