Prosopagnosia
Mostrando 13-21 de 21 artigos, teses e dissertações.
-
13. PROSOPAGNOSIA
“And what is the nature of this knowledge or recollection? I mean to ask, Whether a person, who having seen or heard or in any way perceived anything, knows not only that, but has a conception of something else which is the subject, not of the same but of some other kind of knowledge, may not be fairly said to recollect that of which he has the conception?
-
14. Pure alexia and right hemiachromatopsia in posterior dementia.
A 66 year old, right handed woman presented with pure alexia and right hemiachromatopsia (PARH) in the context of a posterior dementia. PARH was accompanied by prosopagnosia, 2-D object agnosia, and environmental agnosia. Visual fields were normal to confrontation testing. The pathological anatomy of PARH involves circumscribed damage to the lingual and fusi
-
15. Progressive degeneration of the right temporal lobe studied with positron emission tomography.
A 79 year old man with a twelve year progressive history of prosopagnosia and recent naming difficulty, in whom other intellectual skills were preserved, is described. Positron emission tomography (PET) revealed an area of right temporal lobe hypometabolism, with an additional area of less severe hypometabolism at the left temporal pole. This may represent a
-
16. Achromatopsia in the aura of migraine.
A 49 year old woman reported an attack of transient neurological dysfunction associated with unilateral headache. A prominent feature of the aura was a period of complete achromatopsia, so that the visual scene was experienced in monochrome. The episode developed to include features of prosopagnosia and spatial agnosia before resolving completely. Other epis
-
17. Topographic amnesia: spatial memory disorder, perceptual dysfunction, or category specific semantic memory impairment?
A 60 year old patient, SE, who presented with a severe difficulty in finding his way around previously familiar environments and a mild prosopagnosia is described. SE had herpes simplex encephalitis resulting in selective right temporal lobe damage. He showed normal spatial learning, but was severely imparied in his ability to recognise pictures of buildings
-
18. A modulatory role for facial expressions in prosopagnosia
Brain-damaged patients experience difficulties in recognizing a face (prosopagnosics), but they can still recognize its expression. The dissociation between these two face-related skills has served as a keystone of models of face processing. We now report that the presence of a facial expression can influence face identification. For normal viewers, the pres
National Academy of Sciences.
-
19. Impairment of facial recognition in patients with right cerebral infarcts quantified by computer aided "morphing".
OBJECTIVE: To investigate where facial recognition is located anatomically and to establish whether there is a graded transition from unimpaired recognition of faces to complete prosopagnosia after infarctions in the territory of the middle cerebral artery. METHODS: A computerised morphing program was developed which shows 30 frames gradually changing from p
-
20. Implicit knowledge: new perspectives on unconscious processes.
Recent evidence from cognitive science and neuroscience indicates that brain-damaged patients and normal subjects can exhibit nonconscious or implicit knowledge of stimuli that they fail to recollect consciously or perceive explicitly. Dissociations between implicit and explicit knowledge, which have been observed across a variety of domains, tasks, and mate
-
21. Seeing with Profoundly Deactivated Mid-level Visual Areas: Non-hierarchical Functioning in the Human Visual Cortex
A fundamental concept in visual processing is that activity in high-order object-category distinctive regions (e.g., lateral occipital complex, fusiform face area, middle temporal+) is dependent on bottom-up flow of activity in earlier retinotopic areas (V2, V3, V4) whose main input originates from primary visual cortex (V1). Thus, activity in down stream ar
Oxford University Press.