WK6 (M): Visual Agnosia

Cards (61)

  • What is Cognitive Neuropsychology?
    It studies cognitive impairments by examining what has gone wrong.
  • How does Cognitive Neuropsychology help us understand cognitive processes?
    By using patterns of deficits to develop models of cognitive functions.
  • What type of studies does Cognitive Neuropsychology primarily look at?
    Case studies of patients with brain lesions.
  • What does Cognitive Neuropsychology examine in patients?
    It examines what tasks patients are impaired at and what they can do.
  • What are some ways of acquiring brain damage?
    Neurosurgery, strokes, traumatic head injuries, tumors, viral infections, and neurodegenerative disorders.
  • Why might patients undergo neurosurgery?
    In the absence of pharmacological treatments, especially in cases of severe epilepsy.
  • How do strokes lead to brain damage?
    By disrupting the blood supply in the brain, causing death of neurons.
  • What is the most common form of brain injury in people under 40?
    Traumatic head injuries.
  • What causes tumors in the brain?
    Tumors are formed when new cells are produced in a poorly regulated manner.
  • How do viral infections affect the brain?
    Viruses target cells in the brain, such as Herpes Simplex Encephalitis and HIV.
  • What is the impact of neurodegenerative disorders on the brain?
    They increase with life expectancy and include conditions like Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease.
  • What can single case studies provide in Cognitive Neuropsychology?
    Valid data to test and develop cognitive theories.
  • What does the term "Agnosia" mean?
    Agnosia means "without knowledge".
  • What is Visual Agnosia?
    It is an impairment in the ability to recognize visual objects despite intact sensory input.
  • How does Visual Agnosia affect object recognition?
    Patients have difficulties recognizing objects despite having normal visual acuity.
  • Who conducted the case study of Dr. P?
    Oliver Sacks in 1985.
  • What did Dr. P struggle to identify in his case study?
    He struggled to identify objects and their functions.
  • What is the name of the test used to assess matching functions?
    The Matching to Function test.
  • What are the two basic forms of Agnosia according to Lissauer?
    Apperceptive and Associative Agnosia.
  • What characterizes Apperceptive Agnosia?
    It involves problems with percepts and forming stable representations of objects.
  • What is a key feature of Associative Agnosia?
    Patients have a normal percept but cannot attribute identity to objects.
  • How do the modern accounts of Agnosia differ from Lissauer's account?
    They include additional levels such as shape/feature coding and semantic knowledge.
  • What is the significance of the Efron Shape Matching test?
    It assesses whether patients can match basic shapes, indicating intact shape coding.
  • What is the debate surrounding Pseudoagnosia?
    Whether failures to perceive shapes should be classified as agnosia.
  • How did DF's condition affect her ability to use shape?
    DF could not match shapes but could use shape to guide her actions.
  • What was DF's ability regarding object sizes?
    DF could not discriminate between sizes but could accurately pick up objects.
  • Why is DF's case significant in understanding visual processing?
    It shows a dissociation between perception and action in visual processing.
  • What are some problems in identifying objects?
    Brightness discrimination, colour, acuity, orientation
  • What is the debate surrounding pseudoagnosia?
    Whether failure to perceive a shape should be classified as agnosia
  • Who supports the classification of shape perception failure as agnosia?
    Humphreys and Riddoch
  • Who opposes the classification of shape perception failure as agnosia?
    Warrington
  • What does Warrington argue about shape coding?
    Shape coding is sensory
  • What condition did DF suffer from?
    CO poisoning leading to posterior cerebral lesions
  • What was DF's performance on the Efron Test?
    DF failed to match basic shapes
  • What could DF do despite her shape perception impairment?
    Use shape to guide action
  • How did DF respond when shown a slot?
    She could not describe its position or rotate her hand to match it
  • What could DF do with her hand or card in relation to the slot?
    She could place her hand or card into the slot
  • What does DF's ability to calibrate hand movements indicate?
    She 'knew' about orientation
  • How did DF perform in discriminating between blocks of different sizes?
    DF was unable to discriminate between sizes
  • How did DF manage to pick up objects accurately?
    With a gap between her finger and thumb reflecting the object's size