DEEP DYSLEXIA - A CASE-STUDY OF CONNECTIONIST NEUROPSYCHOLOGY

被引:600
作者
PLAUT, DC
SHALLICE, T
机构
[1] UNIV TORONTO,DEPT PSYCHOL,TORONTO M5S 1A1,ONTARIO,CANADA
[2] UNIV TORONTO,DEPT COMP SCI,TORONTO M5S 1A1,ONTARIO,CANADA
[3] UNIV LONDON UNIV COLL,LONDON WC1E 6BT,ENGLAND
关键词
D O I
10.1080/02643299308253469
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Deep dyslexia is an acquired reading disorder marked by the occurrence of semantic errors (e.g. reading RIVER as ''ocean''). In addition, patients exhibit a number of other symptoms, including visual and morphological effects in their errors, a part-of-speech effect, and an advantage for concrete over abstract words. Deep dyslexia poses a distinct challenge for cognitive neuropsychology because there is little understanding of why such a variety of symptoms should co-occur in virtually all known patients. Hinton and Shallice (1991) replicated the co-occurrence of visual and semantic errors by lesioning a recurrent connectionist network trained to map from orthography to semantics. Although the success of their simulations is encouraging, there is little understanding of what underlying principles are responsible for them. In this paper we evaluate and, where possible, improve on the most important design decisions made by Hinton and Shallice, relating to the task, the network architecture, the training procedure, and the testing procedure. We identify four properties of networks that underly their ability to reproduce the deep dyslexic symptom-complex: distributed orthographic and semantic representations, gradient descent learning, attractors for word meanings, and greater richness of concrete vs. abstract semantics. The first three of these are general connectionist principles and the last is based on earlier theorising. Taken together, the results demonstrate the usefulness of a connectionist approach to understanding deep dyslexia in particular, and the viability of connectionist neuropsychology in general.
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页码:377 / 500
页数:124
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