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Structural processing and category-specific deficits

  • J. Frederico Marques

      Affiliations

    • Faculty of Psychology, University of Lisbon, Portugal
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Faculdade de Psicologia, Universidade de Lisboa, Alameda da Universidade, 1649-013 Lisboa, Portugal.
  • ,
  • Ana Raposo

      Affiliations

    • Faculty of Psychology, University of Lisbon, Portugal
  • ,
  • Jorge Almeida

      Affiliations

    • Faculty of Psychology, University of Lisbon, Portugal
    • School of Psychology, University of Minho, Portugal

Received 28 May 2011; received in revised form 16 September 2011; accepted 18 October 2011. published online 23 November 2011.
Corrected Proof

Reviewed 21 June 2011. Action editor Jane Riddoch

Abstract 

We evaluated the contribution of four structural dimensions (object parts, internal details, objects contours and variability of the representation), as a possible source of categorical processing differences and category-specific deficits. Importantly, these dimensions aggregate 22 different structural measures that have been proposed to describe the Snodgrass and Vanderwart (1980) picture set. Study 1 analysed the differences between the four dimensions across domains and categories. Study 2 investigated how these dimensions may contribute to the performance of two patients with category-specific deficits that have been reported previously in the literature (Farah et al., 1991). The results showed that living things were structurally more complex than non-living things, scoring higher in object parts and object contours. Regarding the variability of the representation, living things did not show much within-item diversity but did show more contour overlap and less visual similarity, the latter two qualities of living things being detrimental to object processing in a naming task. Parts, contours and variability of the representation also differentiated animals, fruits and vegetables and, to a certain degree, non-living things: animals had more parts, fruits had more object contours and non-living things had a lower variability of the representation (which was especially related to higher within-item diversity and lower contour overlap). The same three dimensions predicted patient performance. However, when structural dimensions were considered together with domain (living/non-living) and concept familiarity, only variability of the representation contributed significantly to patient performance.

Keywords: Category-specific deficits, Variability of the representation, Object parts, Objects contours

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PII: S0010-9452(11)00280-2

doi:10.1016/j.cortex.2011.10.006

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