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Original Articles

The role of premorbid expertise on object identification in a patient with category-specific visual agnosia

Pages 401-419 | Published online: 09 Sep 2010

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David Schuster, Javier Rivera, Brittany C. Sellers, Stephen M. Fiore & Florian Jentsch. (2013) Perceptual training for visual search. Ergonomics 56:7, pages 1101-1115.
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Articles from other publishers (8)

Geneviéve Desmarais, Mike J. Dixon & Eric A. Roy. (2007) A role for action knowledge in visual object identification. Memory & Cognition 35:7, pages 1712-1723.
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Daniel Smilek, Kelly A. Malcolmson, Jonathan S. A. Carriere, Meghan Eller, Donna Kwan & Michael Reynolds. (2007) When “3” is a Jerk and “E” is a King: Personifying Inanimate Objects in Synesthesia. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 19:6, pages 981-992.
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Rachel Robbins & Elinor McKone. (2007) No face-like processing for objects-of-expertise in three behavioural tasks. Cognition 103:1, pages 34-79.
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TOM A. SCHWEIZER & MIKE J. DIXON. (2006) The influence of visual and nonvisual attributes in visual object identification. Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society 12:2, pages 176-183.
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Geneviève Desmarais & Mike J. Dixon. (2005) Understanding the structural determinants of object confusion in memory: An assessment of psychophysical approaches to estimating visual similarity. Perception & Psychophysics 67:6, pages 980-996.
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Thomas J. Palmeri & Isabel Gauthier. (2004) Visual object understanding. Nature Reviews Neuroscience 5:4, pages 291-303.
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Isabel Gauthier, Marlene Behrmann & Michael J. Tarr. (2004) Are Greebles like faces? Using the neuropsychological exception to test the rule. Neuropsychologia 42:14, pages 1961-1970.
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Cindy M Bukach, Daniel N Bub, Michael E.J Masson & D Stephen Lindsay. (2004) Category specificity in normal episodic learning: Applications to object recognition and category-specific agnosia. Cognitive Psychology 48:1, pages 1-46.
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