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Original Articles

Functional Properties of Concepts: Studies of Normal and Brain-damaged Patients

Pages 511-545 | Published online: 18 Aug 2010

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Read on this site (22)

KirstenI. Taylor, BarryJ. Devereux & LorraineK. Tyler. (2011) Conceptual structure: Towards an integrated neurocognitive account. Language and Cognitive Processes 26:9, pages 1368-1401.
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Ria De Bleser. (2009) History of aphasia. Aphasiology 23:12, pages 1427-1437.
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Sally J. Robinson & Christine M. Temple. (2009) The representation of semantic knowledge in a child with Williams syndrome. Cognitive Neuropsychology 26:3, pages 307-337.
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SharonM. Antonucci, PélagieM. Beeson, DavidM. Labiner & StevenZ. Rapcsak. (2008) Lexical retrieval and semantic knowledge in patients with left inferior temporal lobe lesions . Aphasiology 22:3, pages 281-304.
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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 Garrard & Erin Carroll. (2005) Knowledge of living, nonliving and “sensory quality” categories in semantic dementia. Neurocase 11:5, pages 338-350.
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J. Frederico Marques. (2005) Naming from definition: The role of feature type and feature distinctiveness. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A 58:4, pages 603-611.
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Marcella Laiacona, Riccardo Barbarotto & Erminio Capitani. (2005) Animals recover but plant life knowledge is still impaired 10 years after herpetic encephalitis: the long-term follow-up of a patient. Cognitive Neuropsychology 22:1, pages 78-94.
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Alex Martin & Alfonso Caramazza. (2003) NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL AND NEUROIMAGING PERSPECTIVES ON CONCEPTUAL KNOWLEDGE: AN INTRODUCTION. Cognitive Neuropsychology 20:3-6, pages 195-212.
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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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Francesca Borgo & Tim Shallice. (2003) CATEGORY SPECIFICITY AND FEATURE KNOWLEDGE:EVIDENCE FROM NEW SENSORY-QUALITY CATEGORIES. Cognitive Neuropsychology 20:3-6, pages 327-353.
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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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Sebastian J. Crutch & Elizabeth K. Warrington. (2003) THE SELECTIVE IMPAIRMENT OF FRUIT AND VEGETABLE KNOWLEDGE:AMULTIPLE PROCESSING CHANNELS ACCOUNT OF FINE-GRAIN CATEGORY SPECIFICITY. Cognitive Neuropsychology 20:3-6, pages 355-372.
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L. K. Tyler, P. Bright, E. Dick, P. Tavares, L. Pilgrim, P. Fletcher, M. Greer & H. Moss. (2003) DO SEMANTIC CATEGORIES ACTIVATE DISTINCT CORTICAL REGIONS? EVIDENCE FOR A DISTRIBUTED NEURAL SEMANTIC SYSTEM. Cognitive Neuropsychology 20:3-6, pages 541-559.
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Veerle Vanoverberghe & Gert Storms. (2003) Feature importance in feature generation and typicality rating. European Journal of Cognitive Psychology 15:1, pages 1-18.
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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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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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Luca La Fisca, Virginie Vandenbulcke, Erika Wauthia, Aurélie Miceli, Isabelle Simoes Loureiro, Laurence Ris, Laurent Lefebvre, Bernard Gosselin & Cyril R. Pernet. (2022) Biases in BCI experiments: Do we really need to balance stimulus properties across categories?. Frontiers in Computational Neuroscience 16.
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Omid Khatin-Zadeh & Danyal Farsani. (2022) The understanding of abstract concepts: a perspective from distributed models of conceptual representation. Discover Psychology 2:1.
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Isabelle Simoes Loureiro & Laurent Lefebvre. (2016) Distinct progression of the deterioration of thematic and taxonomic links in natural and manufactured objects in Alzheimer's disease. Neuropsychologia 91, pages 426-434.
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Marcella Laiacona, Riccardo Barbarotto, Elena Baratelli & Erminio Capitani. (2016) Revised and extended norms for a picture naming test sensitive to category dissociations. Neurological Sciences 37:9, pages 1499-1510.
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Isabelle Simoes-Loureiro & Laurent Lefebvre. (2015) Développement d’un questionnaire de connaissances sémantiques des objets naturels et manufacturés pour enfants de 5 à 9 ans. L’Année psychologique Vol. 115:3, pages 409-434.
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Isabelle Simoes Loureiro & Laurent Lefebvre. (2015) Développement d’un questionnaire de connaissances sémantiques des objets naturels et manufacturés pour enfants de 5 à 9 ans. L’Année psychologique 115:03, pages 409-434.
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Isabelle Simoes Loureiro & Laurent Lefebvre. (2015) Développement d’un questionnaire de connaissances sémantiques des objets naturels et manufacturés pour enfants de 5 à 9 ans. L’Année psychologique 115:03, pages 409-434.
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Anna Leshinskaya & Alfonso Caramazza. (2015) Abstract categories of functions in anterior parietal lobe. Neuropsychologia 76, pages 27-40.
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Laura M. Kressel & James S. Uleman. (2015) The causality implicit in traits. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology 57, pages 51-54.
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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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Catherine Merck, Pierre-Yves Jonin, Mickaël Laisney, Hélène Vichard & Serge Belliard. (2014) When the zebra loses its stripes but is still in the savannah: Results from a semantic priming paradigm in semantic dementia. Neuropsychologia 53, pages 221-232.
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J. Frederico Marques, Mafalda M. Mendes & Ana Raposo. (2012) Sensitivity and salience of form–function correlations of objects: Evidence from feature tasks. Memory & Cognition 40:5, pages 748-759.
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Tobias Bormann & Cornelius Weiller. (2012) “Are there lexicons?” A study of lexical and semantic processing in word-meaning deafness suggests “yes”. Cortex 48:3, pages 294-307.
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Sharon M. Antonucci & Mary Alt. (2011) A lifespan perspective on semantic processing of concrete concepts: does a sensory/motor model have the potential to bridge the gap?. Cognitive, Affective, & Behavioral Neuroscience 11:4, pages 551-572.
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Liliana Rico Duarte, Laetitia Marquié, Jean-Claude Marquié, Patrice Terrier & Pierre-Jean Ousset. (2009) Analyzing feature distinctiveness in the processing of living and non-living concepts in Alzheimer’s disease. Brain and Cognition 71:2, pages 108-117.
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Emer M. E. Forde & Glyn W. Humphreys. (2007) Contrasting effects of repetition across tasks: Implications for understanding the nature of refractory behavior and models of semantic memory. Cognitive, Affective, & Behavioral Neuroscience 7:3, pages 198-211.
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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 .
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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Yannick Joye & Philip Van Locke. (2007) Motivating biomorphic constructions based on complex systems science. Systems Research and Behavioral Science 24:1, pages 103-114.
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Patricia A. McMullen & Kerri S. Purdy. (2006) Category-specific effects on the identification of non-manipulable objects. Brain and Cognition 62:3, pages 228-240.
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Nadège Roll Carpentier, Françoise Bonthoux & Solène Kalénine. (2009) Vieillissement de l’organisation conceptuelle : accès aux propriétés des objets naturels et fabriqués. L’Année psychologique 106:02, pages 191.
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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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Tatiana Sitnikova, W. Caroline West, Gina R. Kuperberg & Phillip J. Holcomb. (2006) The neural organization of semantic memory: Electrophysiological activity suggests feature-based segregation. Biological Psychology 71:3, pages 326-340.
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Frances Lyons, Janice Kay, J. Richard Hanley & Catherine Haslam. (2006) Selective preservation of memory for people in the context of semantic memory disorder: Patterns of association and dissociation. Neuropsychologia 44:14, pages 2887-2898.
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Daniela B. Fenker, Michael R. Waldmann & Keith J. Holyoak. (2005) Accessing causal relations in semantic memory. Memory & Cognition 33:6, pages 1036-1046.
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Maria Anna Tallandini & Anna Roia. (2005) Lexical categorization modalities in pre-school children: Influence of perceptual and verbal tasks. Contemporary Educational Psychology 30:2, pages 143-165.
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Giuseppe Sartori & Luigi Lombardi. (2005) Double Dissociations on the Same Stimuli. Cortex 41:6, pages 867-868.
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Giuseppe Sartori & Luigi Lombardi. (2004) Semantic Relevance and Semantic Disorders. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 16:3, pages 439-452.
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Billi Randall, Helen E. Moss, Jennifer M. Rodd, Mike Greer & Lorraine K. Tyler. (2004) Distinctiveness and Correlation in Conceptual Structure: Behavioral and Computational Studies.. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition 30:2, pages 393-406.
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Catherine Haslam, Janice Kay, J. Richard Hanley & Frances Lyons. (2004) Biographical Knowledge: Modality-Specific or Modality-Neutral?. Cortex 40:3, pages 451-466.
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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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Timothy P. McNamara & Jon B. Holbrook. 2003. Handbook of Psychology. Handbook of Psychology 445 474 .
J.Frederico Marques. (2002) Names, concepts, features and the living/nonliving things dissociation. Cognition 85:3, pages 251-275.
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Yukari Takarae & Daniel T. Levin. (2001) Animals and Artifacts May Not Be Treated Equally: Differentiating Strong and Weak Forms of Category-Specific Visual Agnosia. Brain and Cognition 45:2, pages 249-264.
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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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C Gerlach, I Law, A Gade & O.B Paulson. (2000) Categorization and category effects in normal object recognition. Neuropsychologia 38:13, pages 1693-1703.
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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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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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Matthew A. Lambon Ralph, Kim S. Graham, Karalyn Patterson & John R. Hodges. (1999) Is a Picture Worth a Thousand Words? Evidence from Concept Definitions by Patients with Semantic Dementia. Brain and Language 70:3, pages 309-335.
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Kate Nation & Margaret J Snowling. (1999) Developmental differences in sensitivity to semantic relations among good and poor comprehenders: evidence from semantic priming. Cognition 70:1, pages B1-B13.
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Lorraine K Tyler & Helen E Moss. (1998) Going, going, gone . . . ? Implicit and explicit tests of conceptual knowledge in a longitudinal study of semantic dementia. Neuropsychologia 36:12, pages 1313-1323.
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Lorraine K. Tyler, Annette Karmiloff-Smith, J. Kate Voice, Tassos Stevens, Julia Grant, Orlee Udwin, Mark Davies & Patricia Howlin. (1997) Do Individuals with Williams Syndrome have Bizarre Semantics? Evidence for Lexical Organization Using an On-Line Task. Cortex 33:3, pages 515-527.
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