We report a case series analysis of a group of seven patients with apparent "category-specific" disorders affecting living things. On standard diagnostic tests, a range of deficits were apparent, with some cases appearing to have impaired visual access to stored knowledge, some with impaired semantic knowledge (across modalities), and some with an impairment primarily at a name retrieval stage. Patients with a semantic deficit were impaired for both visual and associative/functional knowledge about living things, whilst patients with a modality-specific access deficit showed worse performance when stored visual knowledge was probed. In addition, patients with impaired access to visual knowledge were affected when perceptual input was degrad...
A large number of brain-damaged patients with heterogeneous category-specific deficits have been rep...
Original article can be found at: http://www.informaworld.com Copyright Informa / Taylor and Francis...
In this article the authors describe a patient (J.P.) whose category-specific naming deficit eluded ...
We report a case series analysis of a group of seven patients with apparent "category-specific" diso...
We report a case series analysis of a group of seven patients with apparent "category-specific" diso...
Category-specific impairments of object recognition and naming are among the most intriguing disorde...
We report a single case study of a 22-year-old, brain-damaged patient, Jennifer, who showed a semant...
The dramatic effects of brain damage can provide some of the most interesting insights into the natu...
We report a new case of category-specific semantic impairment, affecting living entities, in a patie...
Case A.C.A. presented an associated impairment of visual recognition and semantic knowledge for cele...
Several accounts have been proposed to explain category-specific recognition impairments, but only a...
Original article can be found at: http://journals.cambridge.org/action/login Copyright Cambridge Uni...
We report two head-injured patients whose knowledge of living things was selectively disrupted. Thei...
Object and scene recognition both require mapping of incoming sensory information to existing concep...
A single case study of a brain damaged patient with a category-specific visual agnosia for living th...
A large number of brain-damaged patients with heterogeneous category-specific deficits have been rep...
Original article can be found at: http://www.informaworld.com Copyright Informa / Taylor and Francis...
In this article the authors describe a patient (J.P.) whose category-specific naming deficit eluded ...
We report a case series analysis of a group of seven patients with apparent "category-specific" diso...
We report a case series analysis of a group of seven patients with apparent "category-specific" diso...
Category-specific impairments of object recognition and naming are among the most intriguing disorde...
We report a single case study of a 22-year-old, brain-damaged patient, Jennifer, who showed a semant...
The dramatic effects of brain damage can provide some of the most interesting insights into the natu...
We report a new case of category-specific semantic impairment, affecting living entities, in a patie...
Case A.C.A. presented an associated impairment of visual recognition and semantic knowledge for cele...
Several accounts have been proposed to explain category-specific recognition impairments, but only a...
Original article can be found at: http://journals.cambridge.org/action/login Copyright Cambridge Uni...
We report two head-injured patients whose knowledge of living things was selectively disrupted. Thei...
Object and scene recognition both require mapping of incoming sensory information to existing concep...
A single case study of a brain damaged patient with a category-specific visual agnosia for living th...
A large number of brain-damaged patients with heterogeneous category-specific deficits have been rep...
Original article can be found at: http://www.informaworld.com Copyright Informa / Taylor and Francis...
In this article the authors describe a patient (J.P.) whose category-specific naming deficit eluded ...