Autobiographical experience and word meaning
- 1 September 1995
- journal article
- case report
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Memory
- Vol. 3 (3-4) , 225-246
- https://doi.org/10.1080/09658219508253152
Abstract
The role of current personal experience in understanding of word meaning was investigated in a patient, WM, who suffers from semantic dementia. The study was prompted by the observation that WM, despite being severely impaired on formal tests of word comprehension and naming, retained a range of vocabulary pertaining to her daily life. If autobiographical experience has a general facilitatory effect, then this should affect which concepts are retained and which lost, but not influence the quality of that conceptual knowledge. Conversely, if personal autobiography has a direct role in investing concepts with meaning, then WM's understanding of nominal terms that she uses spontaneously in conversation ought not to be normal, but should be constrained by the autobiographical context in which she uses those terms. WM could define nouns and noun phrases drawn from her conversational vocabulary, but her definitions had a markedly autobiographical quality. Moreover, WM was extremely impaired in her ability to define new noun phrases, constructed by combining words from her conversational vocabulary (e.g. “dog licence”, constructed from “driving licence” and “dog” “oil field” constructed from “oil” and “field”). It was concluded that WM does not have normal conceptual understanding of nouns and noun phrases that she uses appropriately in conversation. Her understanding is narrow and autobiographically constrained. The findings, which suggest an interactive relationship between autobiographical and semantic memory, have implications for understanding of the progressive breakdown of semantic knowledge.Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- Semantic dementia: Autobiographical contribution to preservation of meaningCognitive Neuropsychology, 1994
- A verbal-semantic category-specific recognition impairmentCognitive Neuropsychology, 1993
- On the distinction between deficits of access and deficits of storage: A question of theoryCognitive Neuropsychology, 1993
- Constraining theories of semantic memory processing: Evidence from DementiaCognitive Neuropsychology, 1992
- Actors but not scripts: The dissociation of people and events in retrograde amnesiaNeuropsychologia, 1992
- Categories of knowledge? unfamiliar aspects of living and nonliving thingsCognitive Neuropsychology, 1992
- General to specific access to word meaning: A claim re-examinedCognitive Neuropsychology, 1989
- Interaction between vision and language in category-specific semantic impairmentCognitive Neuropsychology, 1988
- Verifying autobiographical factsCognition, 1987
- The anterograde and retrograde retrieval ability of a patient with amnesia due to encephalitisNeuropsychologia, 1983