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The organization of conceptual knowledge: the evidence from category-specific semantic deficits

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2003

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Elsevier
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Caramazza, Alfonso, and Bradford Z. Mahon. 2003. “The Organization of Conceptual Knowledge: The Evidence from Category-Specific Semantic Deficits.” Trends in Cognitive Sciences 7 (8): 354–61. https://doi.org/10.1016/s1364-6613(03)00159-1.

Abstract

Questions about the organization of conceptual knowledge in the human brain can be addressed by studying patients with category-specific semantic deficits: disproportionate and even selective impairment of conceptual knowledge of one category of objects compared with other categories. Recently, consensus has emerged regarding the basic facts of category-specific semantic deficits: (1) the categories that can be disproportionately impaired or spared are 'animals', 'fruit/ vegetables', and 'artifacts'; and (2) category-specific semantic deficits are not associated with disproportionate deficits for a type or modality of knowledge. Together with findings in functional neuroimaging, these data indicate a complex organization of conceptual knowledge characterized by several independent dimensions of organization.

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