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"A horse of a different colour".  Do patients with semantic dementia recognise different versions of the same object as the same?
            Authors:
Ikeda, M., PATTERSON, K., GRAHAM, K.S., Lambon Ralph, M.A. & HODGES, J.R.
            Reference:
Neuropsychologia, 44(4), 566-575
            Year of publication:
2006
            CBU number:
6105
Abstract:
Ten patients with semantic dementia resulting from bilateral anterior temporal-lobe   atrophy, and ten matched controls, were tested on an object recognition task in   which they were invited to choose (from a 4-item array) the picture representing   "the same thing" as an object picture that they had just inspected and attempted to   name. The target in the response array was never physically identical to the studied   picture but differed from it ; in the various conditions ; in size, angle of view, colour  or exemplar (e.g., a different breed of dog). In one test block for each patient, the   response array was presented immediately after the studied picture was removed; in   another block, a 2-minute filled delay was inserted between study and test. The   patients performed relatively well when the studied object and target response   differed only in the size of the picture on the page, but were significantly impaired   as a group in the other three type-of-change conditions, even with no delay between   study and test. The five patients whose structural brain imaging revealed major   right-temporal atrophy were more impaired overall, and also more affected by the   2-minute delay, than the five patients with an asymmetric pattern characterised by   predominant left-sided atrophy. These results are interpreted in terms of a   hypothesis that successful classification of an object token as an object type is not a   pre-semantic ability but rather results from interaction of perceptual and   conceptual processing.  
 
					 MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit
MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit

