Analyzing the factors underlying the structure and computation of the meaning of chipmunk, cherry, chisel, cheese, and cello (and many other such concrete nouns).
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] James L. McClelland,et al. Semantic Cognition: A Parallel Distributed Processing Approach , 2004 .
[2] Cindy M. Bukach,et al. Category specificity in normal episodic learning: Applications to object recognition and category-specific agnosia , 2004, Cognitive Psychology.
[3] R. C. Tees. Review of The organization of behavior: A neuropsychological theory. , 2003 .
[4] T. Gale,et al. Category-Specific Naming and the ‘Visual’ Characteristics of Line Drawn Stimuli , 2002, Cortex.
[5] Matthew H. Davis,et al. Is there an anatomical basis for category-specificity? Semantic memory studies in PET and fMRI , 2002, Neuropsychologia.
[6] Glyn W. Humphreys,et al. Do Pixel-Level Analyses Describe Psychological Perceptual Similarity? A Comment on ‘Category-Specific Naming and the ‘Visual’ Characteristics of Line Drawn Stimuli’ by Laws and Gale , 2002, Cortex.
[7] Tom A Schweizer,et al. The role of premorbid expertise on object identification in a patient with category-specific visual agnosia , 2002, Cognitive neuropsychology.
[8] Patrick Bonin,et al. The determinants of spoken and written picture naming latencies. , 2002, British journal of psychology.
[9] Erminio Capitani,et al. Living musical instruments and inanimate body parts? , 2001, Neuropsychologia.
[10] Markus Kiefer,et al. The limits of a distributed account of conceptual knowledge , 2001, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.
[11] Matthew A. Lambon Ralph,et al. Longitudinal Profiles of Semantic Impairment for Living and Nonliving Concepts in Dementia of Alzheimer's Type , 2001, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
[12] A. Ishai,et al. Distributed and Overlapping Representations of Faces and Objects in Ventral Temporal Cortex , 2001, Science.
[13] Tim M. Gale,et al. Visual crowding and category specific deficits for pictorial stimuli: A neural network model , 2001, Cognitive neuropsychology.
[14] L. Tyler,et al. Towards a distributed account of conceptual knowledge , 2001, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.
[15] G. Humphreys,et al. Hierarchies, similarity, and interactivity in object recognition: “Category-specific” neuropsychological deficits , 2001, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.
[16] Daniel N. Bub,et al. Limitations on current explanations of category-specific agnosia , 2001, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.
[17] Alfonso Caramazza,et al. The sensory/functional assumption or the data: Which do we keep? , 2001, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.
[18] Mike J. Dixon,et al. Contribution of visual and semantic proximity to identification performance in a viral encephalitis patient , 2001, Brain and Cognition.
[19] Claudio Luzzatti,et al. Lexical and semantic factors influencing picture naming in aphasia , 2001, Brain and Cognition.
[20] A. Caramazza,et al. The dissociation of color from form and function knowledge , 2001, Nature Neuroscience.
[21] Alex Martin,et al. Semantic memory and the brain: structure and processes , 2001, Current Opinion in Neurobiology.
[22] M. L. Lambon Ralph,et al. Prototypicality, distinctiveness, and intercorrelation: Analyses of the semantic attributes of living and nonliving concepts , 2001, Cognitive neuropsychology.
[23] Guido Gainotti,et al. What the Locus of Brain Lesion Tells us About the Nature of the Cognitive Defect Underlying Category-Specific Disorders: A Review , 2000, Cortex.
[24] Erminio Capitani,et al. Semantic Category Dissociations, Familiarity and Gender * * Part of this study was presented at the Seventeenth Workshop on Cognitive Neuropsychology, Bressanone, Italy, 24-29 January 1999. , 2000, Cortex.
[25] J B Poline,et al. Partially overlapping neural networks for real and imagined hand movements. , 2000, Cerebral cortex.
[26] S. MacDonald,et al. Intraindividual variability in cognitive performance in older adults: comparison of adults with mild dementia, adults with arthritis, and healthy adults. , 2000, Neuropsychology.
[27] Alex Martin,et al. Representation of Manipulable Man-Made Objects in the Dorsal Stream , 2000, NeuroImage.
[28] M. Dordain,et al. Age of acquisition and name agreement as predictors of mean response latencies in picture naming of French adults. , 2000, Brain and cognition.
[29] Ken McRae,et al. Further evidence for feature correlations in semantic memory. , 1999, Canadian journal of experimental psychology = Revue canadienne de psychologie experimentale.
[30] J. Haxby,et al. Attribute-based neural substrates in temporal cortex for perceiving and knowing about objects , 1999, Nature Neuroscience.
[31] L. Barsalou,et al. Whither structured representation? , 1999, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.
[32] Chris McNorgan,et al. An attractor model of lexical conceptual processing: simulating semantic priming , 1999, Cogn. Sci..
[33] M. Farah,et al. A neural basis for category and modality specificity of semantic knowledge , 1999, Neuropsychologia.
[34] A Caramazza,et al. Deficits in lexical and semantic processing: Implications for models of normal language , 1999, Psychonomic bulletin & review.
[35] Matthew A. Lambon Ralph,et al. Are living and non-living category-specific deficits causally linked to impaired perceptual or associative knowledge? evidence from a category-specific double dissociation , 1998 .
[36] A. Caramazza,et al. Domain-Specific Knowledge Systems in the Brain: The Animate-Inanimate Distinction , 1998, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
[37] Matthew A. Lambon Ralph,et al. Naming in semantic dementia—what matters? , 1998, Neuropsychologia.
[38] Giuseppe Sartori,et al. The oyster with four legs: A neuropsychological study on the interaction of visual and semantic information , 1998 .
[39] K. Laws,et al. WHY LEOPARDS NEVER CHANGE THEIR SPOTS: A REPLY TO MOSS, TYLER, AND JENNINGS. , 1998, Cognitive neuropsychology.
[40] Martin Arguin,et al. Semantic and Visual Determinants of Face Recognition in a Prosopagnosic Patient , 1998, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
[41] E T Bullmore,et al. The functional anatomy of imagining and perceiving colour , 1998, Neuroreport.
[42] Steven A. Sloman,et al. Feature Centrality and Conceptual Coherence , 1998, Cogn. Sci..
[43] P Garrard,et al. Category specific semantic loss in dementia of Alzheimer's type. Functional-anatomical correlations from cross-sectional analyses. , 1998, Brain : a journal of neurology.
[44] Hanna Damasio,et al. Premotor and Prefrontal Correlates of Category-Related Lexical Retrieval , 1998, NeuroImage.
[45] Catriona M. Morrison,et al. Real age-of-acquisition effects in lexical retrieval. , 1998, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.
[46] Martin Arguin,et al. The Interaction of Object Form and Object M eaning in the Identification Performance of a Patient with Category-specific Visual Agnosia , 1997 .
[47] Scott T. Grafton,et al. Premotor Cortex Activation during Observation and Naming of Familiar Tools , 1997, NeuroImage.
[48] J. Hampton,et al. Conceptual combination: Conjunction and negation of natural concepts , 1997, Memory & cognition.
[49] Randall J. Frank,et al. Explaining category-related effects in the retrieval of conceptual and lexical knowledge for concrete entities: operationalization and analysis of factors , 1997, Neuropsychologia.
[50] A. Damasio,et al. A neural basis for the retrieval of conceptual knowledge , 1997, Neuropsychologia.
[51] Lorraine K. Tyler,et al. When leopards lose their spots: knowledge of visual properties in category-specific deficits for living things , 1997 .
[52] G W Humphreys,et al. Top-down processes in object identification: evidence from experimental psychology, neuropsychology and functional anatomy. , 1997, Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences.
[53] E. DeYoe,et al. Graded effects of spatial and featural attention on human area MT and associated motion processing areas. , 1997, Journal of neurophysiology.
[54] Mark S. Seidenberg,et al. On the nature and scope of featural representations of word meaning. , 1997, Journal of experimental psychology. General.
[55] Lorraine K. Tyler,et al. Functional properties of concepts: studies of normal and brain-damaged patients , 1997 .
[56] Mark S. Seidenberg,et al. Double Dissociation of Semantic Categories in Alzheimer's Disease , 1997, Brain and Language.
[57] G. Humphreys,et al. On the links between visual knowledge and naming: a single case study of a patient with a category-specific impairment for living things , 1997 .
[58] Elaine Funnell,et al. JBR: A reassessment of concept familiarity and a category-specific disorder for living things , 1996 .
[59] Martin Arguin,et al. Shape Integration for Visual Object Recognition and Its Implication in Category-Specific Visual Agnosia , 1996 .
[60] Richard D. Hichwa,et al. A neural basis for lexical retrieval , 1996, Nature.
[61] Leslie G. Ungerleider,et al. Neural correlates of category-specific knowledge , 1996, Nature.
[62] E. Bizzi,et al. The Cognitive Neurosciences , 1996 .
[63] Leslie G. Ungerleider,et al. Discrete Cortical Regions Associated with Knowledge of Color and Knowledge of Action , 1995, Science.
[64] D. Howard,et al. Aphasic naming: What matters? , 1995, Neuropsychologia.
[65] R. Mccarthy,et al. Naming without knowing and appearance without associations: evidence for constructive processes in semantic memory? , 1995, Memory.
[66] G. Humphreys,et al. An interactive activation approach to object processing: effects of structural similarity, name frequency, and task in normality and pathology. , 1995, Memory.
[67] G. Gainotti,et al. Neuroanatomical correlates of category-specific semantic disorders: a critical survey. , 1995, Memory.
[68] S Baron-Cohen,et al. The physiology of coloured hearing. A PET activation study of colour-word synaesthesia. , 1995, Brain : a journal of neurology.
[69] Michael R. Waldmann,et al. Causal models and the acquisition of category structure , 1995 .
[70] G. Humphreys,et al. Semantic interference effects on naming using a postcue procedure: Tapping the links between semantics and phonology with pictures and words. , 1995 .
[71] F. Boller,et al. The naming impairment of living and nonliving items in Alzheimer's disease , 1995, Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society.
[72] Jules Davidoff,et al. Impaired retrieval of object-colour knowledge with preserved colour naming , 1994, Neuropsychologia.
[73] D. Perrett,et al. Responses of Anterior Superior Temporal Polysensory (STPa) Neurons to Biological Motion Stimuli , 1994, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
[74] F. Lucchelli,et al. Are Semantic Systems Separately Represented in the Brain? The Case of Living Category Impairment , 1994, Cortex.
[75] H Abdi,et al. Theory-based correlations and their role in children's concepts. , 1993, Child development.
[76] Erminio Capitani,et al. Perceptual and Associative Knowledge in Category Specific Impairment of Semantic Memory: A Study of two Cases , 1993, Cortex.
[77] R. Job,et al. Category-specific form-knowledge deficit in a patient with herpes simplex virus encephalitis , 1993 .
[78] John Hart,et al. Neural subsystems for object knowledge , 1992, Nature.
[79] Martha J. Farah,et al. Semantically-bounded anomia: Implications for the neural implementation of naming , 1992, Neuropsychologia.
[80] Elaine Funnell,et al. Categories of knowledge? unfamiliar aspects of living and nonliving things , 1992 .
[81] A J Parkin,et al. Naming Impairments following Recovery from Herpes Simplex Encephalitis: Category-Specific? , 1992, The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology. A, Human experimental psychology.
[82] G. Humphreys,et al. Calling a squirrel a squirrel but a canoe a wigwam: a category-specific deficit for artefactual objects and body parts , 1992 .
[83] A. Caramazza,et al. Category-specific naming and comprehension impairment: a double dissociation. , 1991, Brain : a journal of neurology.
[84] N Mai,et al. Disturbance of movement vision after bilateral posterior brain damage. Further evidence and follow up observations. , 1991, Brain : a journal of neurology.
[85] James L. McClelland,et al. A computational model of semantic memory impairment: modality specificity and emergent category specificity. , 1991, Journal of experimental psychology. General.
[86] J. Tanaka,et al. Object categories and expertise: Is the basic level in the eye of the beholder? , 1991, Cognitive Psychology.
[87] S. Zeki,et al. Cerebral akinetopsia (visual motion blindness). A review. , 1991, Brain : a journal of neurology.
[88] Karl J. Friston,et al. A direct demonstration of functional specialization in human visual cortex , 1991, The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience.
[89] M Corbetta,et al. Attentional modulation of neural processing of shape, color, and velocity in humans. , 1990, Science.
[90] Alfonso Caramazza,et al. Selective impairment of semantics in lexical processing , 1990 .
[91] Alfonso Caramazza,et al. The multiple semantics hypothesis: Multiple confusions? , 1990 .
[92] Mark S. Seidenberg,et al. On the roles of frequency and lexical access in word naming , 1990 .
[93] A. Damasio. Time-locked multiregional retroactivation: A systems-level proposal for the neural substrates of recall and recognition , 1989, Cognition.
[94] F. Keil. Concepts, Kinds, and Cognitive Development , 1989 .
[95] M. Silveri,et al. Interaction between vision and language in category-specific semantic impairment , 1988 .
[96] T. Shallice. From Neuropsychology to Mental Structure: Converging Operations: Specific Syndromes and Evidence from Normal Subjects , 1988 .
[97] S. Gelman. The development of induction within natural kind and artifact categories , 1988, Cognitive Psychology.
[98] A. Jennekens-Schinkel. Current perspectives in dysphasia , 1987 .
[99] DH Hubel,et al. Segregation of form, color, and stereopsis in primate area 18 , 1987, The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience.
[100] E. Warrington,et al. Categories of knowledge. Further fractionations and an attempted integration. , 1987, Brain : a journal of neurology.
[101] R. Berndt,et al. Category-specific naming deficit following cerebral infarction , 1985, Nature.
[102] T. Shallice,et al. Category specific semantic impairments , 1984 .
[103] Edward E. Smith,et al. Correlated properties in natural categories , 1984 .
[104] E. Warrington,et al. CATEGORY SPECIFIC ACCESS DYSPHASIA , 1983 .
[105] J. G. Snodgrass,et al. A standardized set of 260 pictures: norms for name agreement, image agreement, familiarity, and visual complexity. , 1980, Journal of experimental psychology. Human learning and memory.
[106] E. Rosch,et al. Cognition and Categorization , 1980 .
[107] A. Tversky. Features of Similarity , 1977 .
[108] Carl P. Duncan,et al. Effects of frequency on retrieval from a semantic category , 1977 .
[109] Wayne D. Gray,et al. Basic objects in natural categories , 1976, Cognitive Psychology.
[110] E. Warrington. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology the Selective Impairment of Semantic Memory the Selective Impairment of Semantic Memory , 2022 .
[111] E. Rosch,et al. Family resemblances: Studies in the internal structure of categories , 1975, Cognitive Psychology.
[112] Lance J. Rips,et al. Structure and process in semantic memory: A featural model for semantic decisions. , 1974 .
[113] K. Forster,et al. Lexical Access and Naming Time. , 1973 .
[114] Emmon W. Bach,et al. Universals in Linguistic Theory , 1970 .
[115] M. Ross Quillian,et al. Retrieval time from semantic memory , 1969 .
[116] Charles J. Fillmore,et al. THE CASE FOR CASE. , 1967 .
[117] Steven A. Sloman,et al. The HIPE Theory of Function , 2005, Functional Features in Language and Space.
[118] G. Humphreys,et al. Category specificity in brain and mind , 2002 .
[119] George S. Cree,et al. Factors underlying category-specific semantic deficits , 2001 .
[120] Alex Martin,et al. Cortical Regions Associated with Perceiving, Naming, and Knowing about Colors , 1999, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
[121] Mark S. Seidenberg,et al. Category-Specific Semantic Deficits in Focal and Widespread Brain Damage: A Computational Account , 1998, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
[122] P Langley,et al. Proceedings of the 19th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society , 1997 .
[123] Glyn W. Humphreys,et al. Perceptual differentiation as a source of category effects in object processing: Evidence from naming and object decision , 1997, Memory & cognition.
[124] David C. Plaut,et al. Systematicity and Specialization in Semantics: A Computational Account of Optic Aphasia , 1996 .
[125] Martha J Farah,et al. The Living/Nonliving Dissociation is Not an Artifact: Giving an A Priori Implausible Hypothesis a Strong Test. , 1996, Cognitive neuropsychology.
[126] David Gaffan,et al. A Spurious Category-Specific Visual Agnosia for Living Things in Normal Human and Nonhuman Primates , 1993, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
[127] J. Kruschke,et al. ALCOVE: an exemplar-based connectionist model of category learning. , 1992, Psychological review.
[128] Adrienne Lehrer,et al. Frames, Fields, and Contrasts : New Essays in Semantic and Lexical Organization , 1992 .
[129] L. Barsalou. Frames, concepts, and conceptual fields , 1992 .
[130] Geoffrey E. Hinton,et al. Lesioning an attractor network: investigations of acquired dyslexia , 1991 .
[131] Glyn W. Humphreys,et al. Cascade processes in picture identification , 1988 .
[132] Roger C. Schank,et al. SCRIPTS, PLANS, GOALS, AND UNDERSTANDING , 1988 .
[133] B. Fischhoff,et al. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Learning and Memory , 1980 .
[134] Eleanor Rosch,et al. Principles of Categorization , 1978 .
[135] Celia B. Harris,et al. Memory and Cognition , 1977 .
[136] F. Attneave,et al. The Organization of Behavior: A Neuropsychological Theory , 1949 .
[137] HighWire Press. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London , 1781, The London Medical Journal.