Face Specificity of Lifelong Prosopagnosia
Face Specificity of Lifelong Prosopagnosia
Taylor & Francis Ltd
10/2018
116
Dura
Inglês
9781138360594
15 a 20 dias
Descrição não disponível.
Introduction: The face specificity of lifelong prosopagnosia Tirta Susilo 1. Congenital prosopagnosia without object agnosia? A literature review Jacob Geskin and Marlene Behrmann 2. Association vs dissociation and setting appropriate criteria for object agnosia Lucia Garrido, Bradley Duchaine and Joseph DeGutis 3. Should developmental prosopagnosia, developmental body agnosia, and developmental object agnosia be considered independent neurodevelopmental conditions? Katie L. H. Gray and Richard Cook 4. Decoupling category level and perceptual similarity in congenital prosopagnosia Alison Campbell and James W. Tanaka 5. On defining and interpreting dissociations Christian Gerlach, Cathrine Heikamp Lissau and Nanna Kirkegaard Hildebrandt 6. Commonly associated face and object recognition impairments have implications for the cognitive architecture John R. Towler and Jeremy J. Tree 7. A possible neuronal account for the behavioural heterogeneity in congenital prosopagnosia Gideon Rosenthal and Galia Avidan 8. Congenital prosopagnosia: Deficit diagnosis and beyond Adrian Nestor 9. What do associations and dissociations between face and object recognition abilities tell us about the domain-generality of face processing? Martin Eimer 10. The power of how-lessons learned from neuropsychology and face processing Meike Ramon 11. Face specificity of developmental prosopagnosia, moving beyond the debate on face specificity Beatrice de Gelder and Jan Van den Stock 12. Objects and faces, faces and objects.... Jason J. S. Barton 13. On the use of cognitive neuropsychological methods in developmental disorders Randi Starrfelt and Ro Julia Robotham 14. Prosopdysgnosia? What could it tell us about the neural organization of face and object recognition? Bruno Rossion 15. Over time, the right results will emerge Marlene Behrmann and Jacob Geskin
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Introduction: The face specificity of lifelong prosopagnosia Tirta Susilo 1. Congenital prosopagnosia without object agnosia? A literature review Jacob Geskin and Marlene Behrmann 2. Association vs dissociation and setting appropriate criteria for object agnosia Lucia Garrido, Bradley Duchaine and Joseph DeGutis 3. Should developmental prosopagnosia, developmental body agnosia, and developmental object agnosia be considered independent neurodevelopmental conditions? Katie L. H. Gray and Richard Cook 4. Decoupling category level and perceptual similarity in congenital prosopagnosia Alison Campbell and James W. Tanaka 5. On defining and interpreting dissociations Christian Gerlach, Cathrine Heikamp Lissau and Nanna Kirkegaard Hildebrandt 6. Commonly associated face and object recognition impairments have implications for the cognitive architecture John R. Towler and Jeremy J. Tree 7. A possible neuronal account for the behavioural heterogeneity in congenital prosopagnosia Gideon Rosenthal and Galia Avidan 8. Congenital prosopagnosia: Deficit diagnosis and beyond Adrian Nestor 9. What do associations and dissociations between face and object recognition abilities tell us about the domain-generality of face processing? Martin Eimer 10. The power of how-lessons learned from neuropsychology and face processing Meike Ramon 11. Face specificity of developmental prosopagnosia, moving beyond the debate on face specificity Beatrice de Gelder and Jan Van den Stock 12. Objects and faces, faces and objects.... Jason J. S. Barton 13. On the use of cognitive neuropsychological methods in developmental disorders Randi Starrfelt and Ro Julia Robotham 14. Prosopdysgnosia? What could it tell us about the neural organization of face and object recognition? Bruno Rossion 15. Over time, the right results will emerge Marlene Behrmann and Jacob Geskin
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.