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E-raamat: Case Studies in the Neuropsychology of Vision [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

Edited by (Oxford University, UK)
  • Formaat: 224 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Oct-1999
  • Kirjastus: Psychology Press Ltd
  • ISBN-13: 9780203765500
  • Taylor & Francis e-raamat
  • Hind: 189,26 €*
  • * hind, mis tagab piiramatu üheaegsete kasutajate arvuga ligipääsu piiramatuks ajaks
  • Tavahind: 270,37 €
  • Säästad 30%
  • Formaat: 224 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Oct-1999
  • Kirjastus: Psychology Press Ltd
  • ISBN-13: 9780203765500
One important means to understanding normal cognitive functions is the study of the breakdown of these functions following brain damage. This book provides reviews of major case studies dealing with the breakdown of visual perception and recognition, including the disorders of motion vision, colour vision, perceptual integration, perceptual classification, recognition of particular categories of object, semantic access from vision (in optic aphasia), and recognition impairments with relative sparing of imagery. The cases are discussed in the light of studies that have followed since, and the chapters provide a context in which the contributions of the case studies can be evaluated.
List of contributors ix General background xi Motion blindness 1(16) C.A. Heywood J. Zihl Introduction 1(2) The case of L.M. 3(1) Behavioural consequences of L.M.s movement vision disorder 4(2) Neuropsychological assessment 6(2) Cerebral akinetopsia 8(6) Conclusions 14(1) References 14(3) Cerebral achromatopsia 17(24) C.A. Heywood A. Cowey Introduction 17(3) Cerebral achromatopsia 20(2) A single case study 22(12) Inferior temporal cortex 34(2) Form processing in achromatopsia 36(1) Conclusions 36(1) References 37(4) Integrative agnosia 41(18) Glyn W. Humphreys Historical background 41(2) Defining integrative agnosia 43(4) Analyses using visual search 47(2) Encoding wholes and parts 49(2) Agnosia and simultanagnosia 51(1) Long-term visual memory 52(1) Agnosia 16 years on 53(1) Relations to other patients 53(2) Conclusions 55(1) Acknowledgements 55(1) References 55(4) Apperceptive agnosia: A deficit of perceptual categorisation of objects 59(22) Jules Davidoff Elizabeth K. Warrington Historical background 59(4) Case studies in Warrington & James (1988) 63(8) Issues of representation 71(4) Unresolved problems 75(2) References 77(4) Vision and visual mental imagery 81(30) Marlene Behrmann Morris Moscovitch Gordon Winocur Common systems for perception and imagery 84(2) Evidence for dissociations between perception and imagery 86(2) A case report of a patient with intact imagery and visual agnosia 88(9) Consistent evidence from other patients 97(1) Discussion and conclusion 98(7) Concluding remarks 105(1) Acknowledgements 105(1) References 105(6) Category-specific recognition impairments for living and nonliving things 111(22) Emer M.E. Forde Modern case studies of category-specific recognition impairments 113(4) Category-specific recognition impairments: An artifactual finding? 117(2) Category-specific recognition impairments: A return to the idea that these might reflect damage to a categorically organised knowledge system 119(2) Category-specific recognition impairments: The importance of category structure 121(3) Summary to date 124(4) Category-specific impairments for nonliving things 128(2) References 130(3) Optic aphasia: A review of some classic cases 133(28) M. Jane Riddoch Introduction 133(2) Lhermitte and Beauvois (1973) disconnection account of optic aphasia 135(1) Re-evaluation by Beauvois (1982) of her original account: Disconnection according to modality 136(3) Are visual semantics intact in optic aphasia? Disconnection within modality 139(7) The direct route to naming account 146(2) The right hemisphere hypothesis: An anatomical disconnection 148(3) Superadditive effects of two or more mild deficits 151(2) Gesturing ability as an indicator of visual recognition 153(3) Summary to date 156(1) A coda 157(1) Acknowledgements 158(1) References 158(3) Covert recognition and anosognosia in prosopagnosic patients 161(20) Edward H.F. De Haan Acknowledgements 177(1) References 177(4) Relations among the agnosias 181(20) Martha J. Farah Taxonomies of visual agnosia 182(3) Appreceptive agnosia 185(4) Associative agnosia 189(3) Subtypes of associative agnosia 192(5) Acknowledgements 197(1) References 197(4) Author index 201(8) Subject index 209
Humphreys, Glyn W.