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Phonological impairments in Hindi aphasics: Error analyses and cross-linguistic comparisons Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2024-02-26 Dinesh Ramoo, Claudia Galluzzi, Andrew Olson, Cristina Romani
We assessed phonological and apraxic impairments in Hindi persons with aphasia (PwA) and compared them to Italian PwA reported in previous studies. Overall, we found strong similarities. Phonologic...
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Characterizing language production across modalities Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2024-02-20 Marc Gimeno-Martínez, Cristina Baus
This study investigates factors influencing lexical access in language production across modalities (signed and oral). Data from deaf and hearing signers were reanalyzed (Baus and Costa, 2015, On t...
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Why is a flamingo named as pelican and asparagus as celery? Understanding the relationship between targets and errors in a speeded picture naming task Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2024-02-13 Leonie F. Lampe, Maria Zarifyan, Solène Hameau, Lyndsey Nickels
Speakers sometimes make word production errors, such as mistakenly saying pelican instead of flamingo. This study explored which properties of an error influence the likelihood of its selection ove...
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Visual search organization in a cancellation task in developmental dyslexia Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2024-01-12 Alma Guilbert, Françoise Rochette
There is converging evidence that performance on visual search tasks, often assessed with cancellation tasks, is associated with performance on reading tasks. However, results have been inconsisten...
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Two types of developmental surface dysgraphia: to bee but not to bea Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2024-01-12 Naama Friedmann, Aviah Gvion
We report on two types of developmental surface dysgraphia. One type, exhibited by 8 participants, is orthographic lexicon surface dysgraphia, which involves an impairment in the orthographic outpu...
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Semantic feature production norms for manipulable objects Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2024-01-12 Daniela Valério, Akbar Hussain, Jorge Almeida
Feature generation tasks and feature databases are important for understanding how knowledge is organized in semantic memory, as they reflect not only the kinds of information that individuals hold...
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Toward the characterization of a visual form of developmental dyslexia: Reduced visuo-attentional capacity for processing multiple stimuli made of separable features Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2024-01-12 Audrey Vialatte, Eric Chabanat, Agnès Witko, Laure Pisella
Some dyslexics cannot process multiple letters simultaneously. It has been argued that this reduced visuo-attentional (VA) letter span could result from poor reading ability and experience. Here, m...
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Provoked overt recognition in acquired prosopagnosia using multiple different images of famous faces Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2024-01-12 David Pitcher, Rebekah Caulfield, A. Mike Burton
Provoked overt recognition refers to the fact that patients with acquired prosopagnosia can sometimes recognize faces when presented in arrays of individuals from the same category (e.g., actors or...
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Parallel or sequential? Decoding conceptual and phonological/phonetic information from MEG signals during language production Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2023-12-17 Francesca Carota, Jan-Mathijs Schoffelen, Robert Oostenveld, Peter Indefrey
Speaking requires the temporally coordinated planning of core linguistic information, from conceptual meaning to articulation. Recent neurophysiological results suggested that these operations invo...
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Two sides of the same coin? Comparing structural priming between production and comprehension in choice data and in reaction times Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2023-11-21 Rianne van Lieburg, Robert Hartsuiker, Sarah Bernolet
Although structural priming seems to rely on the same mechanisms in production and comprehension, effects are not always consistent between modalities. Methodological differences often result in di...
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A developmental account of the role of sequential dependencies in typical and atypical language learners Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2023-11-14 Lisa Goffman, LouAnn Gerken
The Gerken lab has shown that infants are able to learn sound patterns that obligate local sequential dependencies that are no longer readily accessible to adults. The Goffman lab has shown that ch...
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Time-course of phonetic (motor speech) encoding in utterance production Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2023-11-09 Marina Laganaro
Speaking involves the preparation of the linguistic content of an utterance and of the motor programs leading to articulation. The temporal dynamics of linguistic versus motor-speech (phonetic) enc...
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Pseudoword spelling: insights into sublexical representations and lexical interactions Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2023-10-16 Robert W. Wiley, Kristin M. Key, Jeremy J. Purcell
In this work we introduce a new tool for measuring English spelling-sound consistency, the PG Toolkit, which we use to conduct detailed analyses of pseudoword spellings that provide new insights in...
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From intermediate shape-centered representations to the perception of oriented shapes: response to commentaries Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2023-08-29 Gilles Vannuscorps, Albert Galaburda, Alfonso Caramazza
In this response paper, we start by addressing the main points made by the commentators on the target article’s main theoretical conclusions: the existence and characteristics of the intermediate s...
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The relationship between semantic and episodic memory: evidence from a case of severe anterograde amnesia Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2023-08-25 Clément Polin, Aurélie Lacroix, Claire Boutet, Fabien Schneider, Leslie Cartz-Piver, Cécile Diebolt, Jean-Pierre Clément, Benjamin Calvet
It is increasingly being recognized that new declarative, consciously accessible information can be learned in anterograde amnesia, but it is not clear whether this learning is supported by episodi...
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“Looking at nothing”: An implicit ocular motor index of face recognition in developmental prosopagnosia Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2023-08-23 Aida Rahavi, Manuela Malaspina, Andrea Albonico, Jason J. S. Barton
Subjects often look towards to previous location of a stimulus related to a task even when that stimulus is no longer visible. In this study we asked whether this effect would be preserved or reduc...
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Competition in context: response selection within the supervisory attentional system model Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2023-06-15 Andrey Markus, Zohar Eviatar
ABSTRACT We examined the effects of context bias and target exposure duration on error rates (ERR) and response times (RTs) in letter choice task within context. Surface Electromyography (sEMG) was recorded in both hands during context presentation, as a measure of readiness to respond. The goal was to affect the outcome of the task by manipulating relative schemata activation levels prior to target
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Correction Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2023-05-04
Published in Cognitive Neuropsychology (Vol. 39, No. 5-8, 2022)
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An access deficit or a deficit in the phonological representations themselves: What can we learn from naming errors? Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2023-05-04 Aviah Gvion, Michal Biran
ABSTRACT Anomic aphasia is characterized by good comprehension and non-word repetition but poor naming. Two sub-types of deficits might be hypothesized: faulty access to preserved phonological representations or preserved access to impaired representations. Phonological errors may occur only when representations are impaired or in post-lexical deficits (conduction aphasia). We analysed the incidence
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Precision of phonological errors in aphasia supports resource models of phonological working memory in language production Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2023-05-01 Jenah Black, Nazbanou Nozari
ABSTRACT Working memory (WM) is critical for many cognitive functions including language production. A key feature of WM is its capacity limitation. Two models have been proposed to account for such capacity limitation: slot models and resource models. In recent years, resource models have found support in both visual and auditory perception, but do they also extend to production? We investigate this
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Linguistic structure modulates attention in reading: Evidence from negative concord in Italian Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2023-04-12 Alessia Rossetto, Alessio Toraldo, Stefania Laratta, Paolo Tonin, Cecilia Poletto, Giulia Bencini, Carlo Semenza
ABSTRACT We report the reading performance of an Italian speaker with egocentric Neglect Dyslexia on sentences with Negative Concord structures, which contain a linguistic cue to the presence of a preceding negative marker and compare it to sentences with no such cue. As predicted, the frequency of reading the whole sentence, including the initial negative marker non, was higher in Negative Concord
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F = ma. Is the macaque brain Newtonian? Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2023-04-12 Karolina Marciniak DG Agra, Pedro DG Agra
ABSTRACT Intuitive Physics, the ability to anticipate how the physical events involving mass objects unfold in time and space, is a central component of intelligent systems. Intuitive physics is a promising tool for gaining insight into mechanisms that generalize across species because both humans and non-human primates are subject to the same physical constraints when engaging with the environment
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Semantic interference and facilitation in picture naming: The effects of type of impairment and compensatory strategies Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2023-03-26 Raffaele Nappo, Gaspare Galati, Ivana Bureca, Cristina Romani
ABSTRACT We assessed effects of semantic interference in people with aphasia (PWA). Two naming tasks (continuous naming and cyclic blocking) were contrasted with tasks which required suppression of competitors but minimized lexical access (probe task) or required extra-lexical mechanisms of control (Stroop task). In continuous naming, some PWA showed increased interference compared to control participants
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Contributions of semantic and phonological working memory to narrative language independent of single word production: Evidence from acute stroke Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2023-03-16 Rachel Zahn, Tatiana T. Schnur, Randi C. Martin
ABSTRACT Neuropsychological case studies have provided evidence that individuals with semantic, but not phonological, working memory (WM) deficits have difficulty producing phrases containing several content words. These findings supported the claim of a phrasal scope of planning at the grammatical formulation stage of production, where semantic WM supports the maintenance of lexical-semantic representations
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Properties of graphic motor plans in the writing system Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2023-02-19 Michael McCloskey
ABSTRACT The present study explores the extent to which properties of abstract graphemic representations are maintained at the post-graphemic level of graphic motor plans, where the sequences of writing strokes for producing the letters in a word are represented. On the basis of results from a stroke patient (NGN) who has a deficit affecting the activation of graphic motor plans, we explore the post-graphemic
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Intact reading ability despite lacking a canonical visual word form area in an individual born without the left superior temporal lobe Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2023-01-18 Jin Li, Hope Kean, Evelina Fedorenko, Zeynep Saygin
ABSTRACT The visual word form area (VWFA), a region canonically located within left ventral temporal cortex (VTC), is specialized for orthography in literate adults presumbly due to its connectivity with frontotemporal language regions. But is a typical, left-lateralized language network critical for the VWFA’s emergence? We investigated this question in an individual (EG) born without the left superior
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Meaningless imitation in neurodegenerative diseases: Effects of body part, bimanual imitation, asymmetry, and body midline crossing Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2023-01-09 Josselin Baumard, Mathieu Lesourd, Chrystelle Remigereau, Laetitia Laurent, Christophe Jarry, Frédérique Etcharry-Bouyx, Valérie Chauviré, François Osiurak, Didier Le Gall
ABSTRACT Visuo-imitative apraxia has been consistently reported in patients with dementia, yet there have been substantial methodological differences between studies, while multiple, sometimes competing hypotheses have been put forward to explain this syndrome. Our goals were to study specific imitation deficits in groups of patients who have been selected and assigned to a group solely based on clinical
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Not so fast! Response times in the computerized Benton Face Recognition Test may not reflect face recognition ability Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2022-10-06 Joseph DeGutis, Xian Li, Bar Yosef, Maruti V. Mishra
ABSTRACT Response times (RTs) are commonly used to assess cognitive abilities, though it is unclear whether face processing RTs predict recognition ability beyond accuracy. In the current study, we examined accuracy and RT on a widely used face matching assessment modified to collect meaningful RT data, the computerized Benton Facial Recognition Test (BFRT-c), and measured whether RTs predicted face
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Atypical prosopagnosia following right hemispheric stroke: A 23-year follow-up study with M.T. Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2022-10-06 Anna Schroeger, Jürgen M. Kaufmann, Romi Zäske, Gyula Kovács, Thomas Klos, Stefan R. Schweinberger
ABSTRACT Most findings on prosopagnosia to date suggest preserved voice recognition in prosopagnosia (except in cases with bilateral lesions). Here we report a follow-up examination on M.T., suffering from acquired prosopagnosia following a large unilateral right-hemispheric lesion in frontal, parietal, and anterior temporal areas excluding core ventral occipitotemporal face areas. Twenty-three years
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Dissociation between function and manipulation in semantic representations of motor impaired subjects: A new test Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2022-09-02 Jorge Graneri, Sergio Dansilio, Macarena Martínez-Cuitiño, Lina Grasso, María Soledad Cantore, Luciana Brasca
ABSTRACT A fundamental problem in semantic cognition is the representation of human concepts in the brain. Much of the knowledge acquired in the last decades comes from the study of dissociations found in patients with acquired difficulties in language, perception, and action. In particular, some deficits involve loss of knowledge about tools. The dissociation between two relevant aspects of tools
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The building blocks of intuitive physics in the mind and brain Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2022-09-02 Jason Fischer
ABSTRACT There has been a recent wave of interest in understanding the mental processes underlying intuitive physics – our ability to apprehend the physical structure of the world and anticipate how objects will behave as a scene’s dynamics unfold. While work to uncover the neural mechanisms of intuitive physics is just in its beginnings, vibrant lines of neuropsychological research are investigating
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What tool representation, intuitive physics, and action have in common: The brain’s first-person physics engine Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2022-08-22 Jason Fischer, Bradford Z. Mahon
ABSTRACT An overlapping set of brain regions in parietal and frontal cortex are engaged by different types of tasks and stimuli: (i) making inferences about the physical structure and dynamics of the world, (ii) passively viewing, or actively interacting with, manipulable objects, and (iii) planning and execution of reaching and grasping actions. We suggest the observed neural overlap is because a
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Investigating the influence of semantic factors on word retrieval: Reservations, results and recommendations Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2022-08-16 Lyndsey Nickels, Leonie F. Lampe, Catherine Mason, Solène Hameau
ABSTRACT There is consensus that word retrieval starts with activation of semantic representations. However, in adults without language impairment, relatively little attention has been paid to the effects of the semantic attributes of to-be-retrieved words. This paper, therefore, addresses the question of which item-inherent semantic factors influence word retrieval. Specifically, it reviews the literature
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Do capuchin monkeys (Sapajus apella) use exploration to form intuitions about physical properties? Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2022-06-22 Eleanor Jade Jordan, Christoph J. Völter, Amanda M. Seed
ABSTRACT Humans’ flexible innovation relies on our capacity to accurately predict objects’ behaviour. These predictions may originate from a “physics-engine” in the brain which simulates our environment. To explore the evolutionary origins of intuitive physics, we investigate whether capuchin monkeys’ object exploration supports learning. Two capuchin groups experienced exploration sessions involving
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Cochlea to categories: The spatiotemporal dynamics of semantic auditory representations Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2022-06-21 Matthew X. Lowe, Yalda Mohsenzadeh, Benjamin Lahner, Ian Charest, Aude Oliva, Santani Teng
ABSTRACT How does the auditory system categorize natural sounds? Here we apply multimodal neuroimaging to illustrate the progression from acoustic to semantically dominated representations. Combining magnetoencephalographic (MEG) and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scans of observers listening to naturalistic sounds, we found superior temporal responses beginning ∼55 ms post-stimulus onset
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Effects of delay, length, and frequency on onset RTs and word durations: Articulatory planning uses flexible units but cannot be prepared Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2022-06-19 Cristina Romani, Priya Silverstein, Dinesh Ramoo, Andrew Olson
ABSTRACT There is debate regarding whether most articulatory planning occurs offline (rather than online) and whether the products of off-line processing are stored in a separate articulatory buffer until a large enough chunk is ready for production. This hypothesis predicts that delayed naming conditions should reduce not only onset RTs but also word durations because articulatory plans will be buffered
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The role of a shape-centred representations in the perception of complex shapes Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2022-06-16 Casco Clara
ABSTRACT I further develop the Vannuscorps et al. [(2021). Shape-centered representations of bounded regions of space mediate the perception of objects. Cognitive neuropsychology, 1–50.] interpretation of Davida's deficit, as based on a failure of mapping information carried by the parvocellular pathway onto non-retinotopic coordinates. I assumed that magno-parvo cooperation is required to bind local
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Using single cases to understand visual processing: The magnocellular pathway Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2022-06-08 Jared Medina
Published in Cognitive Neuropsychology (Vol. 39, No. 1-2, 2022)
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Davida’s deficits: weak encoding of impoverished stimuli or faulty egocentric representation? Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2022-06-08 Dina V. Popovkina, Anitha Pasupathy
ABSTRACT Vannuscorps and colleagues present the fascinating case of Davida, a young person who makes systematic errors in judgments related to orientations of sharp or high-contrast visual stimuli. In this commentary, we discuss the findings in the context of observations from mid-level ventral visual stream physiology. We propose two additional interpretations for the specificity of the behavioural
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Partial mental simulation explains fallacies in physical reasoning Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2022-06-02 Ilona Bass, Kevin A. Smith, Elizabeth Bonawitz, Tomer D. Ullman
ABSTRACT People can reason intuitively, efficiently, and accurately about everyday physical events. Recent accounts suggest that people use mental simulation to make such intuitive physical judgments. But mental simulation models are computationally expensive; how is physical reasoning relatively accurate, while maintaining computational tractability? We suggest that people make use of partial simulation
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How The visual system turns things the right way up Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2022-05-27 Maryam Vaziri-Pashkam, Bevil R. Conway
Published in Cognitive Neuropsychology (Vol. 39, No. 1-2, 2022)
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Precedence of parvocellular- over magnocellular-biased information for 2D object-related shape processing Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2022-05-23 Jorge Almeida
Published in Cognitive Neuropsychology (Vol. 39, No. 1-2, 2022)
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Davida reorients intermediate visual processing Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2022-05-19 Sam Ling, Michaela Klimova
Published in Cognitive Neuropsychology (Vol. 39, No. 1-2, 2022)
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Physical understanding in neurodegenerative diseases Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2022-05-13 Josselin Baumard, Mathieu Lesourd, Léna Guézouli, François Osiurak
ABSTRACT This quantitative review gives an overview of physical understanding (i.e., the ability to represent and use the laws of physics to interact with the physical world) impairments in Alzheimer’s disease (AD), semantic dementia (SD), and corticobasal syndrome (CBS), as assessed mainly with mechanical problem-solving and tool use tests. This review shows that: (1) SD patients have apraxia of tool
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The role of parvocellular and magnocellular shape maps in the derivation of spatially integrated 3D object representations Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2022-05-10 E. Charles Leek, Irene Reppa
Published in Cognitive Neuropsychology (Vol. 39, No. 1-2, 2022)
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How can the perception of orientation be systematically wrong? Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2022-05-01 Max Coltheart
Published in Cognitive Neuropsychology (Vol. 39, No. 1-2, 2022)
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Errors in constructing visual experience Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2022-03-25 Patrick Cavanagh
Published in Cognitive Neuropsychology (Vol. 39, No. 1-2, 2022)
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The search for shape-centered representations Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2022-03-25 Edward H. SIlson, Antony B. Morland
Published in Cognitive Neuropsychology (Vol. 39, No. 1-2, 2022)
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Does more imply better vision? Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2022-03-25 Elisa Castaldi, Guido Marco Cicchini, Francesca Tinelli, Maria Concetta Morrone
Published in Cognitive Neuropsychology (Vol. 39, No. 1-2, 2022)
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Can a fast thinker be a good thinker? The neural correlates of base-rate neglect measured using a two-response paradigm Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2022-03-11 Oshin Vartanian, Timothy K. Lam, Elaine Maceda, Wim De Neys
ABSTRACT Traditionally, it has been assumed that logical thinking requires deliberation. However, people can also make logical responses quickly, exhibiting logical intuitions. We examined the neural correlates of logical intuitions by administering base rate problems during fMRI scanning using a two-response paradigm where participants first responded quickly and then reflectively to problems that
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The role of visual-spatial attention in reading development: a meta-analysis Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2022-03-11 Lorana Gavril, Adrian Roșan, Ștefan Szamosközi
ABSTRACT The association between visual attention and reading development has been investigated as a possible core causal deficit in dyslexia, in addition to phonological awareness. This study aims to provide a meta-analytic review of the research on attentional processes and their relation to reading development, to examine the possible influence on it of orthographic depth, age, and attentional tasks
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Significance and implications of visual shape processing at intermediate cortical levels Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2022-02-25 Bruno G. Breitmeyer
Published in Cognitive Neuropsychology (Vol. 39, No. 1-2, 2022)
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Two sides of the same coin: ADHD affects reactive but not proactive inhibition in children Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2022-02-24 Isabel Suarez, Carlos De los Reyes Aragón, Aurelie Grandjean, Ernesto Barceló, Moises Mebarak, Soraya Lewis, Wilmar Pineda-Alhucema, Laurence Casini
ABSTRACT Children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) present a deficit in inhibitory control. Still, it remains unclear whether it comes from a deficit in reactive inhibition (ability to stop the action in progress), proactive inhibition (ability to exert preparatory control), or both. We compared the performance of 39 children with ADHD and 42 typically developing children performing
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Bottom-up and top-down modulation of route selection in imitation Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2022-02-23 Alessia Tessari, Riccardo Proietti, Raffaella I. Rumiati
ABSTRACT The cognitive system selects the most appropriate action imitative process: a semantic process – relying on long-term memory representations for known actions, and low-level visuomotor transformations for unknown actions. These two processes work in parallel; however, how context regularities and cognitive control modulate them is unclear. In this study, process selection was triggered contextually
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Do computational models of vision need shape-based representations? Evidence from an individual with intriguing visual perceptions Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2022-02-22 Marcelo Armendariz, Will Xiao, Kasper Vinken, Gabriel Kreiman
Published in Cognitive Neuropsychology (Vol. 39, No. 1-2, 2022)
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Identifying the neural loci mediating conscious object orientation perception using fMRI MVPA Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2022-02-19 JohnMark Taylor, Yaoda Xu
Published in Cognitive Neuropsychology (Vol. 39, No. 1-2, 2022)
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Coming to grips with a fundamental deficit in visual perception Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2022-02-19 Robert L. Whitwell, Melvyn A. Goodale
Published in Cognitive Neuropsychology (Vol. 39, No. 1-2, 2022)
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Sixty years of visual cortex single-cell studies to explain the perceptual deficits of Davida Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2022-02-19 Guy A. Orban
Published in Cognitive Neuropsychology (Vol. 39, No. 1-2, 2022)
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Does the dorsal pathway derive intermediate shape-centred representations? Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2022-02-13 Erez Freud, Tasfia Ahsan
Published in Cognitive Neuropsychology (Vol. 39, No. 1-2, 2022)
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A role for visual areas in physics simulations Cogn. Neuropsychol. (IF 3.4) Pub Date : 2022-02-13 Aarit Ahuja, Theresa M. Desrochers, David L. Sheinberg
ABSTRACT To engage with the world, we must regularly make predictions about the outcomes of physical scenes. How do we make these predictions? Recent computational evidence points to simulation—the idea that we can introspectively manipulate rich, mental models of the world—as one explanation for how such predictions are accomplished. However, questions about the potential neural mechanisms of simulation