The organization of conceptual knowledge: the evidence from category-specific semantic deficits. 2003

Alfonso Caramazza, and Bradford Z. Mahon
Cognitive Neuropsychology Laboratory, Department of Psychology, Harvard University, 33 Kirkland Street, 02138, Cambridge, MA, USA

Questions about the organization of conceptual knowledge in the human brain can be addressed by studying patients with category-specific semantic deficits: disproportionate and even selective impairment of conceptual knowledge of one category of objects compared with other categories. Recently, consensus has emerged regarding the basic facts of category-specific semantic deficits: (1) the categories that can be disproportionately impaired or spared are 'animals', 'fruit/vegetables', and 'artifacts'; and (2) category-specific semantic deficits are not associated with disproportionate deficits for a type or modality of knowledge. Together with findings in functional neuroimaging, these data indicate a complex organization of conceptual knowledge characterized by several independent dimensions of organization.

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