What are you looking at? Impaired ‘social attention’ following frontal-lobe damage
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] D. Premack,et al. Does the chimpanzee have a theory of mind? , 1978, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.
[2] M. Posner,et al. Orienting of Attention* , 1980, The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology.
[3] M. Posner,et al. Attention and the detection of signals. , 1980, Journal of experimental psychology.
[4] Kenneth Mark Colby,et al. Clinical artificial intelligence , 1981, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.
[5] J. Jonides. Voluntary versus automatic control over the mind's eye's movement , 1981 .
[6] S. Yantis,et al. Abrupt visual onsets and selective attention: evidence from visual search. , 1984, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.
[7] A. Damasio,et al. Severe disturbance of higher cognition after bilateral frontal lobe ablation , 1985, Neurology.
[8] T. Shallice,et al. Frontal lesions and sustained attention , 1987, Neuropsychologia.
[9] T. Shallice. From Neuropsychology to Mental Structure: Converging Operations: Specific Syndromes and Evidence from Normal Subjects , 1988 .
[10] A. Damasio,et al. Lesion analysis in neuropsychology , 1989 .
[11] P. Rabbitt,et al. Reflexive and voluntary orienting of visual attention: time course of activation and resistance to interruption , 1989 .
[12] B. Milner,et al. Effects of frontal or temporal lobectomy on the use of advance information in a choice reaction time task , 1989, Neuropsychologia.
[13] H. J. Muller,et al. Reflexive and voluntary orienting of visual attention: time course of activation and resistance to interruption. , 1989, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.
[14] D. Povinelli,et al. Inferences about guessing and knowing by chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes). , 1990, Journal of comparative psychology.
[15] R. Seyfarth,et al. How Monkeys See the World , 1990 .
[16] A. Leslie. The theory of mind impairment in autism: Evidence for a modular mechanism of development? , 1991 .
[17] D I Perrett,et al. Organization and functions of cells responsive to faces in the temporal cortex. , 1992, Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences.
[18] B. Alivisatos. The role of the frontal cortex in the use of advance information in a mental rotation paradigm , 1992, Neuropsychologia.
[19] S. Yantis,et al. Stimulus-driven attentional capture: evidence from equiluminant visual objects. , 1994, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.
[20] R. Knight,et al. Human prefrontal lesions increase distractibility to irrelevant sensory inputs , 1995, Neuroreport.
[21] Hanna Damasio,et al. Double Dissociation between Overt and Covert Face Recognition , 1995, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
[22] Mark H. Johnson,et al. Gaze detection and the cortical processing of faces: Evidence from infants and adults , 1995 .
[23] Seeing and knowing: knowledge attribution versus stimulus control in adult humans (Homo sapiens). , 1995, Journal of comparative psychology.
[24] D. Povinelli,et al. Chimpanzees: Joint Visual Attention , 1996 .
[25] A. Baddeley. Exploring the Central Executive , 1996 .
[26] N. Kanwisher,et al. The Fusiform Face Area: A Module in Human Extrastriate Cortex Specialized for Face Perception , 1997, The Journal of Neuroscience.
[27] S. Baron-Cohen. Mindblindness: An Essay on Autism and Theory of Mind , 1997 .
[28] H. Damasio,et al. Dissociation Of Working Memory from Decision Making within the Human Prefrontal Cortex , 1998, The Journal of Neuroscience.
[29] M. Petrides,et al. Directed attention after unilateral frontal excisions in humans , 1998, Neuropsychologia.
[30] A. Kingstone,et al. The eyes have it! Reflexive orienting is triggered by nonpredictive gaze , 1998 .
[31] R. Knight,et al. Frontal Lobe Contributions to Theory of Mind , 1998, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
[32] V. Bruce,et al. Reflexive visual orienting in response to the social attention of others , 1999 .
[33] S. Baron-Cohen,et al. Gaze Perception Triggers Reflexive Visuospatial Orienting , 1999 .
[34] D. Povinelli,et al. A Longitudinal Investigation of Chimpanzees' Understanding of Visual Perception , 1999 .
[35] Uta Frith,et al. Cognitive psychology - Interacting minds - A biological basis , 1999 .
[36] M. Gazzaniga,et al. Reflexive Joint Attention Depends on Lateralized Cortical Connections , 2000, Psychological science.
[37] Sarah Crawford,et al. The effects of anterior lesions on performance on a story comprehension test: left anterior impairment on a theory of mind-type task , 2000, Neuropsychologia.
[38] Frontal lobes II: Cognitive issues , 2000 .
[39] G. E. Berrios,et al. . New York: Cambridge , 2000 .
[40] V. Bruce,et al. Do the eyes have it? Cues to the direction of social attention , 2000, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.
[41] T Shallice,et al. 'Theory of mind' and the prefrontal cortex. , 2001, Brain : a journal of neurology.
[42] E. Miller,et al. An integrative theory of prefrontal cortex function. , 2001, Annual review of neuroscience.
[43] C. Polkey,et al. "Theory of mind" impairments and their relationship to executive functioning following frontal lobe excisions. , 2001, Brain : a journal of neurology.
[44] J. Pratt,et al. Symbolic Control of Visual Attention , 2001, Psychological science.
[45] D. Stuss,et al. The frontal lobes are necessary for 'theory of mind'. , 2001, Brain : a journal of neurology.
[46] J. Tipples. Eye gaze is not unique: Automatic orienting in response to uninformative arrows , 2002, Psychonomic bulletin & review.
[47] A. Kingstone,et al. Are eyes special? It depends on how you look at it , 2002, Psychonomic bulletin & review.
[48] Uta Frith,et al. Theory of mind , 2001, Current Biology.