JBR: A reassessment of concept familiarity and a category-specific disorder for living things

被引:70
作者
Funnell, E [1 ]
Davies, PD [1 ]
机构
[1] UNIV LONDON,ROYAL HOLLOWAY & BEDFORD NEW COLL,DEPT PSYCHOL,EGHAM TW20 0EX,SURREY,ENGLAND
关键词
category-specificity living and non-living things; concept familiarity; JBR;
D O I
10.1080/13554799608402422
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
JBR, a classic case of a category-specific disorder for living things reported by Warrington and Shallice (Brain 1984; 107: 829-54), was reassessed to establish whether differences in concept familiarity could account for his disorder. JBR's ability to name and define living and non-living things deteriorated with decreasing levels of familiarity, but was significantly more impaired for living things in the low familiarity range; no category-specific effect was apparent for highly familiar items. Possible confounding effects arising from the greater visual complexity and visual similarity of living things could not account for the findings. Further investigations showed that JBR's disorder for living things could not be explained in terms of a specific loss of visual feature knowledge. Normal controls also showed a disparity between their naming of living and non-living things rated equivalently for familiarity, indicating that JBR's category disorder was not necessarily pathological in nature. It is suggested that concept familiarity remains the best predictor of performance, but that present measures, which rate only the frequency of experience, appear to be relatively insensitive to differences in the familiarity of less common living and non-living things. In future, familiarity ratings which include the quality of experience might provide a more sensitive measure.
引用
收藏
页码:461 / 474
页数:14
相关论文
共 28 条
[1]   PROGRESSIVE LANGUAGE IMPAIRMENT WITHOUT DEMENTIA - A CASE WITH ISOLATED CATEGORY SPECIFIC SEMANTIC DEFECT [J].
BASSO, A ;
CAPITANI, E ;
LAIACONA, M .
JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY NEUROSURGERY AND PSYCHIATRY, 1988, 51 (09) :1201-1207
[2]   LIVING AND NONLIVING CATEGORIES - IS THERE A NORMAL ASYMMETRY [J].
CAPITANI, E ;
LAIACONA, M ;
BARBAROTTO, R ;
TRIVELLI, C .
NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA, 1994, 32 (12) :1453-1463
[3]   THE MULTIPLE SEMANTICS HYPOTHESIS - MULTIPLE CONFUSIONS [J].
CARAMAZZA, A ;
HILLIS, AE ;
RAPP, BC ;
ROMANI, C .
COGNITIVE NEUROPSYCHOLOGY, 1990, 7 (03) :161-189
[4]   ARE SEMANTIC SYSTEMS SEPARATELY REPRESENTED IN THE BRAIN - THE CASE OF LIVING CATEGORY IMPAIRMENT [J].
DERENZI, E ;
LUCCHELLI, F .
CORTEX, 1994, 30 (01) :3-25
[5]   CATEGORY-SPECIFICITY AND MODALITY-SPECIFICITY IN SEMANTIC MEMORY [J].
FARAH, MJ ;
HAMMOND, KM ;
MEHTA, Z ;
RATCLIFF, G .
NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA, 1989, 27 (02) :193-200
[6]   A COMPUTATIONAL MODEL OF SEMANTIC MEMORY IMPAIRMENT - MODALITY SPECIFICITY AND EMERGENT CATEGORY SPECIFICITY [J].
FARAH, MJ ;
MCCLELLAND, JL .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-GENERAL, 1991, 120 (04) :339-357
[7]   OBJECTS AND PROPERTIES - A STUDY OF THE BREAKDOWN OF SEMANTIC MEMORY [J].
FUNNELL, E .
MEMORY, 1995, 3 (3-4) :497-518
[8]   CATEGORIES OF KNOWLEDGE - UNFAMILIAR ASPECTS OF LIVING AND NONLIVING THINGS [J].
FUNNELL, E ;
SHERIDAN, J .
COGNITIVE NEUROPSYCHOLOGY, 1992, 9 (02) :135-153
[9]   A SPURIOUS CATEGORY-SPECIFIC VISUAL AGNOSIA FOR LIVING THINGS IN NORMAL HUMAN AND NONHUMAN-PRIMATES [J].
GAFFAN, D ;
HEYWOOD, CA .
JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 1993, 5 (01) :118-128
[10]   Cognitive and anatomical locus of lesion in a patient with a category-specific semantic impairment for living beings [J].
Gainotti, G ;
Silveri, MC .
COGNITIVE NEUROPSYCHOLOGY, 1996, 13 (03) :357-+