NAMING WITHOUT KNOWING AND APPEARANCE WITHOUT ASSOCIATIONS - EVIDENCE FOR CONSTRUCTIVE PROCESSES IN SEMANTIC MEMORY

被引:36
作者
LAWS, KR
EVANS, JJ
HODGES, JR
MCCARTHY, RA
机构
[1] MRC,APPL PSYCHOL UNIT,CAMBRIDGE,ENGLAND
[2] ADDENBROOKES HOSP,NEUROL UNIT,CAMBRIDGE,ENGLAND
基金
英国医学研究理事会;
关键词
D O I
10.1080/09658219508253159
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
This study describes a patient (SE) with temporal lobe injury resulting from Herpes Simplex Encephalitis, who displayed a previously unreported impairment in which his knowledge of associative and functional attributes of animals was disproportionately impaired by comparison with his knowledge of their sensory attributes (including their visual properties and characteristic sounds). His knowledge of man-made objects was preserved. A striking aspect of the present case was that the patient remained able to name many animals from their pictures, despite making gross errors in generating associative information about these same animals. This suggests that a semantic representation incorporating stored sensory knowledge may be sufficient for naming (at least for biological categories) and associative information may be unnecessary. Semantic knowledge may normally incorporate more information than is necessary for identification. SE's errors were found to be confabulatory and reconstructive in nature and it is argued that this aspect of his performance challenges passive conceptions of semantic memory couched in terms of a catalogue of stored representations. It is proposed that the patient's disorder affects a dynamic, constructive, and inferential component of his knowledge base, and that this component is sensitive to semantic category.
引用
收藏
页码:409 / 433
页数:25
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