Neural correlates of category-specific knowledge
Open Access
- 1 February 1996
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 379 (6566) , 649-652
- https://doi.org/10.1038/379649a0
Abstract
An intriguing and puzzling consequence of damage to the human brain is selective loss of knowledge about a specific category of objects. One patient may be unable to identify or name living things, whereas another may have selective difficulty identifying man-made objects. To investigate the neural correlates of this remarkable dissociation, we used positron emission tomography to map regions of the normal brain that are associated with naming animals and tools. We found that naming pictures of animals and tools was associated with bilateral activation of the ventral temporal lobes and Broca's area. In addition, naming animals selectively activated the left medial occipital lobe--a region involved in the earliest stages of visual processing. In contrast, naming tools selectively activated a left premotor area also activated by imagined hand movements, and an area in the left middle temporal gyrus also activated by the generation of action words. Thus the brain regions active during object identification are dependent, in part, on the intrinsic properties of the object presented.Keywords
This publication has 51 references indexed in Scilit:
- Pulmonary Abnormalities in Dogs with LeptospirosisJournal of Veterinary Internal Medicine, 2010
- Detection and quantification of leptospires in urine of dogs: a maintenance host for the zoonotic disease leptospirosisEuropean Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases, 2010
- Human leptospirosis in Croatia: current status of epidemiology and clinical characteristicsTransactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 2010
- Development and Validation of a Real-Time PCR for Detection of Pathogenic Leptospira Species in Clinical MaterialsPLOS ONE, 2009
- Current perspectives on canine leptospirosisIn Practice, 2009
- Canine leptospirosis in Canada: a veterinarian's perspectiveCMAJ : Canadian Medical Association Journal, 2008
- Discrete Cortical Regions Associated with Knowledge of Color and Knowledge of ActionScience, 1995
- A verbal-semantic category-specific recognition impairmentCognitive Neuropsychology, 1993
- Calling a squirrel a squirrel but a canoe a wigwam: a category-specific deficit for artefactual objects and body partsCognitive Neuropsychology, 1992
- Interaction between vision and language in category-specific semantic impairmentCognitive Neuropsychology, 1988