When objects lose their meaning: What happens to their use?
- 1 September 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Cognitive, Affective, & Behavioral Neuroscience
- Vol. 2 (3) , 236-251
- https://doi.org/10.3758/cabn.2.3.236
Abstract
The 8 patients involved in this study were impaired on tests assessing knowledge of objects and on the demonstration of their use. The patients' success in object use was significantly correlated with their knowledge about the objects, providing further evidence that conceptual knowledge plays a key role in object use. Having a recipient present improved performance in the moderately impaired patients, suggesting that a certain level of conceptual knowledge must remain for the additional information to be beneficial. Although overall accuracy in using the target objects was not related to our measures of affordance, the specific aspects of use afforded by the objects' structures were relatively impervious to semantic impairment, suggesting a role for affordance information when object-specific knowledge is disrupted. The patients' familiarity with the objects was an important predictor of performance. Finally, despite good performance on tests of mechanical problem solving, the patients showed very little evidence of employing these skills in their interactions with real objects.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Form of Ideational Apraxia as a Delective Deficit of Contention SchedulingCognitive Neuropsychology, 2001
- Evidence for scripts in semantic dementia: Implications for theories of semantic memoryCognitive Neuropsychology, 2001
- Disrupted temporal lobe connections in semantic dementiaBrain, 1999
- Tool use and mechanical problem solving in apraxiaPublished by Elsevier ,1998
- Identification without manipulation: a study of the relations between object use and semantic memoryNeuropsychologia, 1998
- Naming in semantic dementia—what matters?Neuropsychologia, 1998
- Defective imitation of gestures in patients with damage in the left or right hemispheres.Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry, 1996
- Charting the progression in semantic dementia: Implications for the organisation of semantic memoryMemory, 1995
- THE ROLE OF SENSORIMOTOR EXPERIENCE IN OBJECT RECOGNITIONBrain, 1991
- Visual Object Recognition in Patients with Right-Hemisphere Lesions: Axes or Features?Perception, 1986