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Original Articles

When Leopards Lose Their Spots: Knowledge of Visual Properties in Category-specific Deficits for Living Things

Pages 901-950 | Published online: 09 Sep 2010

Keep up to date with the latest research on this topic with citation updates for this article.

Read on this site (19)

Ria De Bleser. (2009) History of aphasia. Aphasiology 23:12, pages 1427-1437.
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François Osiurak, Ghislaine Aubin, Philippe Allain, Christophe Jarry, Isabelle Richard & Didier Le Gall. (2008) Object utilization and object usage: A single-case study. Neurocase 14:2, pages 169-183.
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Deborah Zaitchik & GreggE. A. Solomon. (2008) Animist thinking in the elderly and in patients with Alzheimer's disease. Cognitive Neuropsychology 25:1, pages 27-37.
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Fiona G. Phelps, William J. Macken, Chris Barry & Chris Miles. (2006) Primacy of functional knowledge in semantic representations: The case of living and nonliving things. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 59:11, pages 1984-2009.
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Peter Bright, Helen E. Moss, Emmanuel A. Stamatakis & Lorraine K. Tyler. (2005) The anatomy of object processing: The role of anteromedial temporal cortex. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section B 58:3-4, pages 361-377.
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Glyn W. Humphreys & M. Jane Riddoch. (2003) A CASE SERIES ANALYSIS OF “CATEGORY-SPECIFIC” DEFICITS OF LIVING THINGS:THE HIT ACCOUNT. Cognitive Neuropsychology 20:3-6, pages 263-306.
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E. Capitani, M. Laiacona, B. Mahon & A. Caramazza. (2003) WHAT ARE THE FACTS OF SEMANTIC CATEGORY-SPECIFIC DEFICITS? A CRITICAL REVIEW OF THE CLINICAL EVIDENCE. Cognitive Neuropsychology 20:3-6, pages 213-261.
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Régine Kolinsky, Patrick Fery, Diana Messina, Isabelle Peretz, Sylvie Evinck, Paulo Ventura & José Morais. (2002) The fur of the crocodile and the mooing sheep: A study of a patient with a category-specific impairment for biological things. Cognitive Neuropsychology 19:4, pages 301-342.
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Rachel H. Mycroft, Don C. Mitchell & Janice Kay. (2002) An evaluation of statistical procedures for comparing an individual's performance with that of a group of controls. Cognitive Neuropsychology 19:4, pages 291-299.
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Peter Garrard, Matthew A. Lambon Ralph, John R. Hodges & Karalyn Patterson. (2001) Prototypicality, distinctiveness, and intercorrelation: Analyses of the semantic attributes of living and nonliving concepts. Cognitive Neuropsychology 18:2, pages 125-174.
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LaurelJ. Buxbaum, Tracy Veramontil & MyrnaF. Schwartz. (2000) Function and manipulation tool knowledge in apraxia: Knowing ‘what for’ but not ‘how’. Neurocase 6:2, pages 83-97.
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HelenE. Moss, LorraineK. Tyler, Mark Durrant-peatfield & ElaineM. Bunn. (1998) ‘Two Eyes of a See-through’: Impaired and Intact Semantic Knowledge in a Case of Selective Deficit for Living Things. Neurocase 4:4-5, pages 291-310.
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Keith R. Laws. (1998) WHY LEOPARDS NEVER CHANGE THEIR SPOTS: A REPLY TO MOSS, TYLER, AND JENNINGS. Cognitive Neuropsychology 15:5, pages 467-479.
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Articles from other publishers (39)

Hsin-Te Chang, Ming-Jang Chiu, Ta-Fu Chen, Meng-Ying Liu, Wan-Chun Fan, Ting-Wen Cheng, Ya-Mei Lai & Mau-Sun Hua. (2022) Deterioration and predictive values of semantic networks in mild cognitive impairment. Journal of Neurolinguistics 61, pages 101025.
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Cynthia S. Q. Siew. (2020) Feature distinctiveness effects in language acquisition and lexical processing: Insights from megastudies. Cognitive Processing 21:4, pages 669-685.
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Guido Gainotti. (2018) Why do herpes simplex encephalitis and semantic dementia show a different pattern of semantic impairment in spite of their main common involvement within the anterior temporal lobes?. Reviews in the Neurosciences 29:3, pages 303-320.
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Chris B Martin, Danielle Douglas, Rachel N Newsome, Louisa LY Man & Morgan D Barense. (2018) Integrative and distinctive coding of visual and conceptual object features in the ventral visual stream. eLife 7.
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Alex Clarke & Lorraine K. Tyler. (2015) Understanding What We See: How We Derive Meaning From Vision. Trends in Cognitive Sciences 19:11, pages 677-687.
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Paul Wright, Billi Randall, Alex Clarke & Lorraine K. Tyler. (2015) The perirhinal cortex and conceptual processing: Effects of feature-based statistics following damage to the anterior temporal lobes. Neuropsychologia 76, pages 192-207.
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Barry J. Devereux, Lorraine K. Tyler, Jeroen Geertzen & Billi Randall. (2013) The Centre for Speech, Language and the Brain (CSLB) concept property norms. Behavior Research Methods 46:4, pages 1119-1127.
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William Bains. (2013) What do we think life is? A simple illustration and its consequences. International Journal of Astrobiology 13:2, pages 101-111.
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Olivera Ilic, Vanja Kovic & Suzy J. Styles. (2013) In the Absence of Animacy: Superordinate Category Structure Affects Subordinate Label Verification. PLoS ONE 8:12, pages e83282.
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Lorraine K. Tyler, Shannon Chiu, Jie Zhuang, Billi Randall, Barry J. Devereux, Paul Wright, Alex Clarke & Kirsten I. Taylor. (2013) Objects and Categories: Feature Statistics and Object Processing in the Ventral Stream. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 25:10, pages 1723-1735.
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Kirsten I. Taylor, Barry J. Devereux, Kadia Acres, Billi Randall & Lorraine K. Tyler. (2012) Contrasting effects of feature-based statistics on the categorisation and basic-level identification of visual objects. Cognition 122:3, pages 363-374.
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Erminio Capitani & Marcella Laiacona. (2011) Facts and hypotheses relevant for contrasting animal and plant life semantics. A comment on Gainotti (2010). Cortex 47:2, pages 259-264.
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Serge Carbonnel, Annik Charnallet & Olivier Moreaud. (2010) Organisation des connaissances sémantiques : des modèles classiques aux modèles non abstractifs. Revue de neuropsychologie 2:1, pages 22.
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Amit Almor, Justin M. Aronoff, Maryellen C. MacDonald, Laura M. Gonnerman, Daniel Kempler, Houri Hintiryan, UnJa L. Hayes, Sudha Arunachalam & Elaine S. Andersen. (2009) A common mechanism in verb and noun naming deficits in Alzheimer’s patients. Brain and Language 111:1, pages 8-19.
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Helen E. Moss, Lorraine K. Tyler & Kirsten I. Taylor. 2007. The Oxford Handbook of Psycholinguistics. The Oxford Handbook of Psycholinguistics 217 234 .
Kirsten I. Taylor, Helen E. Moss & Lorraine K. Tyler. 2009. Neural Basis of Semantic Memory. Neural Basis of Semantic Memory 265 301 .
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Keith R. Laws, Rebecca L. Adlington, Tim M. Gale, F. Javier Moreno-Martínez & Giuseppe Sartori. (2007) A meta-analytic review of category naming in Alzheimer's disease. Neuropsychologia 45:12, pages 2674-2682.
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Jackie Masterson, Judit Druks, Michael Kopelman, Linda Clare, Claire Garley & Maureen Hayes. (2007) Selective Naming (and Comprehension) Deficits in Alzheimer's Disease?. Cortex 43:7, pages 921-934.
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Wendy Best, Astrid Schröder & Ruth Herbert. (2006) An investigation of a relative impairment in naming non-living items: theoretical and methodological implications. Journal of Neurolinguistics 19:2, pages 96-123.
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Lorna I. Morrow & M. Frances Duffy. (2005) The representation of ontological category concepts as affected by healthy aging: Normative data and theoretical implications. Behavior Research Methods 37:4, pages 608-625.
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Guido Gainotti. (2005) The influence of gender and lesion location on naming disorders for animals, plants and artefacts. Neuropsychologia 43:11, pages 1633-1644.
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Keith R. Laws. (2005) Categories, Controls and Ceilings. Cortex 41:6, pages 869-872.
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Torstein Låg. (2005) Illusions of Category Specificity?. Cortex 41:6, pages 856-857.
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Peter Bright, Helen E. Moss & Lorraine K. Tyler. (2005) Commentary on Keith R. Laws: “Illusions of Normality”. Cortex 41:6, pages 852-853.
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Keith R. Laws. (2005) “Illusions of Normality”: a Methodological Critique of Category-Specific Naming. Cortex 41:6, pages 842-851.
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Sophie Schwartz, Juliana Baldo, Roger E Graves & Peter Brugger. (2003) Pervasive influence of semantics in letter and category fluency: A multidimensional approach. Brain and Language 87:3, pages 400-411.
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David P Vinson, Gabriella Vigliocco, Stefano Cappa & Simona Siri. (2003) The breakdown of semantic knowledge: Insights from a statistical model of meaning representation. Brain and Language 86:3, pages 347-365.
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Eleanor M. Saffran & Myrna F. Schwartz. 2003. Handbook of Psychology. Handbook of Psychology.
Laurel J Buxbaum & Eleanor M Saffran. (2002) Knowledge of object manipulation and object function: dissociations in apraxic and nonapraxic subjects. Brain and Language 82:2, pages 179-199.
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U. Noppeney & C.J. Price. (2002) Retrieval of Visual, Auditory, and Abstract Semantics. NeuroImage 15:4, pages 917-926.
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José A Hinojosa, Manuel Martı́n-Loeches, Francisco Muñoz, Pilar Casado, Carlos Fernández-Frı́as & Miguel A Pozo. (2001) Electrophysiological evidence of a semantic system commonly accessed by animals and tools categories. Cognitive Brain Research 12:2, pages 321-328.
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Ryuta Kawashima, Giyoo Hatano, Kyoko Oizumi, Motoaki Sugiura, Hiroshi Fukuda, Kengo Itoh, Takashi Kato, Akinori Nakamura, Kentaro Hatano & Shozo Kojima. (2001) Different neural systems for recognizing plants, animals, and artifacts. Brain Research Bulletin 54:3, pages 313-317.
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Margery Lucas. (2000) Semantic priming without association: A meta-analytic review. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review 7:4, pages 618-630.
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L.K. Tyler, H.E. Moss, M.R. Durrant-Peatfield & J.P. Levy. (2000) Conceptual Structure and the Structure of Concepts: A Distributed Account of Category-Specific Deficits. Brain and Language 75:2, pages 195-231.
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Manila Vannucci & Maria Pia Viggiano. (2016) Category Effects on the Processing of Plane-Rotated Objects. Perception 29:3, pages 287-302.
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H.E Moss & L.K Tyler. (2000) A progressive category-specific semantic deficit for non-living things. Neuropsychologia 38:1, pages 60-82.
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Eleanor M. Saffran. (2000) The Organization of Semantic Memory: In Support of a Distributed Model. Brain and Language 71:1, pages 204-212.
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