All Relations between representation and semantics
Publication |
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Publish Date |
Extraction Date |
Species |
J Cambier, J L Signoret, F Bolger. [Visual object agnosia: current conceptions]. Revue neurologique. vol 145. issue 8-9. 1989-12-12. PMID:2682939. |
2) associative visual agnosia: patients can copy, are not aphasic, but give erroneous verbal responses; the disorder concerns the links between formal representations and semantic, lexical representations; the lesions are unilateral and involve the left gyrus angularis connections. |
1989-12-12 |
2023-08-11 |
Not clear |
W W Lytton, J C Brus. Direct dyslexia. Preserved oral reading of real words in Wernicke's aphasia. Brain : a journal of neurology. vol 112 ( Pt 3). 1989-07-27. PMID:2731022. |
his disorder thus appears to be the first pure example of 'direct dyslexia', which, in contrast to previously well-documented examples of 'deep' and 'surface' dyslexia, implies the existence in reading of a direct route, independent of phonology or semantics, between visual and oral word representations. |
1989-07-27 |
2023-08-11 |
Not clear |
A Marti. Representation of semantic and spatial knowledge in Alzheimer's patients: implications for models of preserved learning in amnesia. Journal of clinical and experimental neuropsychology. vol 9. issue 2. 1987-05-15. PMID:2435755. |
representation of semantic and spatial knowledge in alzheimer's patients: implications for models of preserved learning in amnesia. |
1987-05-15 |
2023-08-11 |
Not clear |
S G Zecker, M K Tanenhaus, L Alderman, L Siquelan. Lateralization of lexical codes in auditory word recognition. Brain and language. vol 29. issue 2. 1987-02-03. PMID:3790986. |
the results suggest that the semantic, phonological, and orthographic codes for a word are represented in each hemisphere; however, orthographic and phonological representations are integrated only in the left hemisphere. |
1987-02-03 |
2023-08-11 |
human |
W Geets, A Pino. [Agnosic attacks with speech disorders and asymmetric EEG anomalies]. Acta psychiatrica Belgica. vol 75. issue 2. 1976-12-03. PMID:1233870. |
the semantic and semiological limits of aphasia and agnosia are imprecise: in the present paper, aphasia is defined as a disorder of the verbal abstract representation of the world of signified, while agnosia is defined as a semantic disorder of sensorial analysis. |
1976-12-03 |
2023-08-11 |
Not clear |