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WHAT, WHERE, & HOW SYSTEMS AGNOSIAS!

WHAT, WHERE, & HOW SYSTEMS AGNOSIAS!

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WHAT, WHERE, & HOW SYSTEMS AGNOSIAS!. What, Where, & How Systems. What. Visual Agnosia. Visual Object Agnosia. Apperceptive Associative. Apperceptive Agnosia. Intact vision: Acuity, brightness discrimination, color vision, & other elementary visual capabilities - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: WHAT,  WHERE,  & HOW SYSTEMS AGNOSIAS!

WHAT, WHERE,

& HOW SYSTEMSAGNOSIAS!

Page 2: WHAT,  WHERE,  & HOW SYSTEMS AGNOSIAS!

What, Where, & How Systems

Page 3: WHAT,  WHERE,  & HOW SYSTEMS AGNOSIAS!

What

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Visual Agnosia

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Visual Object Agnosia

• Apperceptive

• Associative

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Apperceptive Agnosia

• Intact vision:– Acuity, brightness discrimination, color vision, & other

elementary visual capabilities– Sometimes preserved shape from motion

• Deficits:– Abnormal shape perception (pictures, letters, simple

shapes)– Grouping process deficit (that operates over an array

of local features representing contour, color, depth, etc.)

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Apperceptive Agnosia

• VIDEO: Apperceptive Agnosia, impaired triangle recognition, subject 1

• VIDEO: Apperceptive Agnosia, impaired object recognition, subject 1

• VIDEO: Object Agnosia 2: Impaired Visual but not tactile identification (naming), subject 2

• VIDEO: Object Agnosia 3: Intact visual movement identification, subject 2

• VIDEO: Object Agnosia 1: Impaired Visual identification (subject given name & array of objects), can’t see objects

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Associative Agnosia

Associative Agnosia• Cannot recognize objects by sight alone• Intact general knowledge of objects• Can recognize objects by touch or definition• Visual perception better than in apperceptive

agnosia • Not a naming deficit

(cannot indicate recognition by nonverbal means)

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Theories of Associative Agnosia

1. Disconnection between visual representations and language areas

2. Disconnection between visual representations and memory areas

3. Stored visual memories have been damaged

4. A perceptual and memory problem, and the two are inseparable

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Intertwined Perception & Memory

• Some visual problems • Copying drawings on line by line• On matching tasks, they rely on slow, sequential featured-

by-feature checking

• In the PDP system, the memory of the stimulus would consist of a pattern of connections strengths among a number of neuron like units. The " perceptual" representation resulting from presentation of the stimulus will depend upon the pattern of connection strengths among the units directly or indirectly activated by the stimulus. Thus, if a memory is altered by damaging the network, perception will be altered as well. Thus, Associative Agnosia may not be the results of an impairment to perception or to memory; rather, the two are in principle inseparable, and the impairment is better described as a loss of high level visual perceptual representations that were shaped by, and embody the memory of, visual experience.

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Apperceptive:Localization of Damage

• Diffuse brain damage, often from

• Multiple infarcts or from other global anoxic events: e.g. carbon monoxide poisoning.

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Apperceptive Associative

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Associative Agnosia

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Prosopagnosia

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Prosopagnosia

• Compensate by relying on nonfacial cues (voice, gait, clothing..)

• With a few exceptions, they can discriminate a face’s gender, ethnicity, approximate age, and emotion conveyed.

• Patients who do not have problems recognizing faces may have difficulty recognizing the emotion.

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Matching Faces Task

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Test of Famous Faces

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Types Of Agnosia

• Face• Object• Printed Word• Face, or face and object -- right or bilateral• Word, or word and object – left• Maximum overlap in left inferior medial

region (including parahippocampal, fusiform, and lingual gyri)

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