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A tale of two agnosias: Distinctions between form and integrative agnosia
Authors:M Jane Riddoch  Glyn W Humphreys  Nabeela Akhtar  Harriet Allen  R Martyn Bracewell  Andrew J Schofield
Institution:1. University of Birmingham , Birmingham, UK M.J.Riddoch@bham.ac.uk;3. University of Birmingham , Birmingham, UK;4. Wolfson Centre for Clinical and Cognitive Neuroscience, University of Wales , Bangor, Wales, UK
Abstract:The performance of two patients with visual agnosia was compared across a number of tests examining visual processing. The patients were distinguished by having dorsal and medial ventral extrastriate lesions. While inanimate objects were disadvantaged for the patient with a dorsal extrastriate lesion, animate items are disadvantaged for the patient with the medial ventral extrastriate lesion. The patients also showed contrasting patterns of performance on the Navon Test: The patient with a dorsal extrastriate lesion demonstrated a local bias while the patient with a medial ventral extrastriate lesion had a global bias. We propose that the dorsal and medial ventral visual pathways may be characterized at an extrastriate level by differences in local relative to more global visual processing and that this can link to visually based category-specific deficits in processing.
Keywords:Apperceptive agnosia  Form agnosia  Local/global processing  Extrastriate lesions
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