Agnosia and Perceptual Disturbances March 27, 2006.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
DISORDERS OF AUDITORY PROCESSING DAY 21 – OCT 15, 2013 Brain & Language LING NSCI Harry Howard Tulane University.
Advertisements

Assessment and treatment of childhood topographical disorientation: A case study Jennifer Touse.
Sensory systems in the brain The visual system. Organization of sensory systems PS 103 Peripheral sensory receptors [ Spinal cord ] Sensory thalamus Primary.
Higher Visual Areas Anatomy of higher visual areas
Perception Chris Rorden Lecture 8: Vision and perception
Human Neuropsychology,
1 Motor Control Chris Rorden Ataxia Apraxia Motor Neurons Coordination and Timing.
DISORDERS OF AUDITORY PROCESSING 1 DAY 20 – OCT 14, 2013 Brain & Language LING NSCI Harry Howard Tulane University.
(2) Face Recognition These notes are the second part of a two-part lecture roughly corresponding to (1) object recognition and (2) face recognition We'll.
Object Recognition Computer Vision CSE399b Spring 2007, Jianbo Shi.
Chapter 44 Visual Perception of Objects Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Are faces special?. Brain damage can produce problems in face recognition - even own reflection (Bodamer, 1947) Prosopagnosia usually results from localized.
Cortical Structure and Function
Disorders of Perception Things that can go wrong with visual perception that cannot be characterized as simple absolute visual field defects. Extra- striate.
1. Why was Ms. Jensen worried about her son? 2. What is significant about teen’s frontal lobes? 3. What is the role of the frontal lobe? 4. What are some.
Language Disorders October 12, Types of Disorders Aphasia: acquired disorder of language due to brain damage Dysarthria: disorder of motor apparatus.
Visual Fields KW Fovea on Cortex KW 8-22 Occipital Lobes are Independent KW 8-24.
Spatial Neglect and Attention Networks
Announcement MIDTERM When: 2/ PM Where: 128 Dennison.
Neural Correlates of Visual Awareness. A Hard Problem Are all organisms conscious?
Evidence from Lesions: Agnosia Lesions (especially in the left hemisphere) of the inferior temporal cortex lead to disorders of memory for people and things.
The Association Cortex. The Neocortex The Association Cortices (Brodmann’s Areas) space,time, motion, planning, decision making, emotional reactivity,
Searching for the NCC We can measure all sorts of neural correlates of these processes…so we can see the neural correlates of consciousness right? So what’s.
Dorsal and Ventral Pathways
Category specificity in the brain?. INTRODUCTION Category-specific deficits: Category-specific (associative) agnosia Prosopagnosia Word blindness Category.
Post-test review session Tuesday Nov in TH241.
Final Review Session Neural Correlates of Visual Awareness Mirror Neurons
I. Face Perception II. Visual Imagery. Is Face Recognition Special? Arguments have been made for both functional and neuroanatomical specialization for.
WHAT, WHERE, & HOW SYSTEMS AGNOSIAS!. What, Where, & How Systems.
Vision. Vision 1: Filling-in, Color, Motion, Form Visual Paths Filling-In –Perceptual Completion –Conceptual Completion Color Motion Form –Agnosia –Prosopagnosia.
Deficits of vision What do visual deficits tell us about the structure of the visual system?
Introduction to Clinical Psychology: Science, Practice and Ethics Chapter 14 Clinical Neuropsychology This multimedia product and its contents are protected.
PY202 Overview. Meta issue How do we internalise the world to enable recognition judgements to be made, visual thinking, and actions to be executed.
Basic Processes in Visual Perception
Dorsal and Ventral Pathways and What They Do. Dorsal and Ventral Pathways visual information arrives at V1 via the retinostriate pathway it is already.
Cognitive Processes PSY 334 Chapter 2 – Perception.
Fractionation of Memory in Medial Temporal Lobe Amnesia
Iris Balodis Scientific Teaching Fellows Course Teachable Tidbit: Face Perception.
Last Lecture Unilateral Neglect a representational deficit? a representational deficit? a deficit in orienting control? a deficit in orienting control?
M.S.: a case of autobiographical amnesia and visual memory loss (D.L Greenberg, M.J. Eacott, D. Brechin, and D.C. Rubin) By Christina Schulte.
The Ventral Stream and Visual Agnosia David Glenn Clark, MD Department of Neurology, UAB and BVAMC David Glenn Clark, MD Department of Neurology, UAB and.
Perception and the Medial Temporal Lobe: Evaluating the Current Evidence Wendy Suzuki.
The Neuropsychology of Music Different levels of inquiry into the neuropsychology of music The analysis of normal and abnormal psychological and physiological.
Object Recognition -Segregation of function -Visual hierarchy -What and where (ventral and dorsal streams) -Single cell coding and ensemble coding -Distributed.
Prosopagnosia:. Prosopagnosia: Defined as a specific inability to recognise familiar faces. (Bodamer 1947). Contrasted with visual agnosia - inability.
Perception 2. Figure 2-19 An example of context effects in perception. Top-Down Processes.
Chapter 4: Object Recognition What do various disorders of shape recognition tell us about object recognition? What do various disorders of shape recognition.
The Many Losses of Alzheimer’s Chantel Bishop RN Sharing the Knowledge in Hospice Palliative Care October 22 nd, 2011.
The Influence of Feature Type, Feature Structure and Psycholinguistic Parameters on the Naming Performance of Semantic Dementia and Alzheimer’s Patients.
Vision. 2 Brodmann Original Calcarine 17 Collateral Sulcus Fusiform Gyrus 18.
Medio temporal lobe atrophy Lateral Temporal lobe atrophy
Announcement MIDTERM When: 2/ PM Where: 182 Dennison.
Higher Visual Areas 1.Anatomy of higher visual areas 2.Two processing pathways - “ Where ” pathway for motion and depth - “ What ” pathway for form and.
Introduction to Psychology Sensation and Perception Prof. Jan Lauwereyns
Visual Agnosias Specification: Theories of perceptual organisation
Last Lecture Organization of the Visual System continued Organization of the Visual System continued Blindsight Blindsight What/Where pathways What/Where.
Object and face recognition
Review session today after class
Lecture 3 Vision and Agnosias
A cerebral hemisphere is defined as one of the two regions of the brain that are delineated by the body's median plane.
Agnosia and Perceptual Disturbances March 17, 2008.
LOGO 지각장애. Perception Percepts o Individuals capable of receiving information of sensation o Data  meaningful, comprehensible Perception o Percepts processing.
Filosofia della mente e scienze cognitive - Lezione ottobre 2016 Capgras delusion was first identified by French psychiatrist Joseph Capgras. In.
Blindsight Patients with scotomas could move eyes to the location of a light flash (Poppel et al., 1973). Case D.B. (Larry Weizkrantz) hemianopic with.
COGS 172 VISION CONTINUED Visual form agnosia
Cognitive Processes PSY 334
Perceptual Disorders Agnosias.
Functional Neuroanatomy: Occipital Lobes
Prosopagnosia.
Brain and higher cortical functions
Presentation transcript:

Agnosia and Perceptual Disturbances March 27, 2006

Blumenfeld, 2002 Visual Field Defects have localizing significance

Blumenfeld, 2002 Separate “Channels” for Motion, Form and Color

Multiple Visual Areas in the Monkey

Object vs. Spatial Vision General principle: inferior lesions produce perceptual impairments; superior lesions produce syndromes dominated by spatial impairment

V4 (color) FFA (face)

Agnosia Failure to recognize previously familiar stimuli Modality-specific Not due to dementia, aphasia, or unfamiliarity with stimulus May be limited to particular classes of stimuli

Agnosia Examples Prosopagnosia (impairment in recognizing familiar faces) Auditory Sound Agnosia (impairment in recognizing sounds of common objects) Phonagnosia (impairment in recognizing familiar people by their voices) Tactile agnosia (impairment in recognizing what’s placed in the hand)

Classes of Agnosia (Lissauer’s stage model) Apperceptive Agnosia inability to recognize or name objects subject cannot copy unrecognized objects strong evidence for sensory-perceptual disturbance Associative Agnosia inability to recognize or name objects subject can generally copy unrecognized objects sensory-perceptual disturbance cannot explain recognition defect

Apperceptive Agnosia (Benson & Greenberg, 1969)

Associative Agnosia (Farah, Hammond, Levine, et al., 1988)

Anatomy implied in Stage Model Occipital Temporal Frontal V-AP A-AP AS

Another way of Classifying Agnosia Stage/level (apperceptive, associative) Function (shape/form, integrative) Modality (visual, auditory, tactile) Domain (objects, faces, colors, sounds) Category (living things, moving things)

Explanations Failure of perception to contact memory Failure of perception to contact language (visual-verbal disconnection) Impairment/degradation of a stored representation of an object in memory Sensory-perceptual impairment

Language Area (naming) Corpus Callosum R Occipital Lobe L Occipital Lobe Anatomy of Visual-Verbal Disconnection

Cognitive Models of Object Recognition Provide “box-models” of stages of information processing Proposed stages derived from cognitive performance data in normals and brain- impaired patients Help to decompose complex abilities into their constituent components

Steps in Assessment of Agnosia Determine whether, in fact, the deficit is “agnosic” –Test for “boundary” conditions (aphasia, amnesia, dementia; modality specificity) Qualify the nature of the deficit (determine conditions under which recognition succeeds and fails) Determine the functional locus of the deficit

proximitysimilarity good continuationclosure

Defects in the “Initial Representation” Visual Form Agnosia: failure in the appreciation of form or shape Simultaneous Agnosia: inability to appreciate meaning of more than one stimulus –Dorsal: bilateral occipitoparietal disease –Ventral: left occipitoparietal junction

Apperceptive Agnosia (Benson & Greenberg, 1969)

Minimal Feature Match Foreshortened Match

Associative Agnosia (Farah, Hammond, Levine, et al., 1988)

BORB Object Decision Task

Demi MooreWinona Ryder vs. Face-Name Learning

BORB Association Match

Bill Clinton Boris Yeltsin Mickey Rooney DeHaan, Bauer, & Greve, 1992

Meryl Streep

Saddam Hussein

John Kerry

Sebastian Weisdorf

Richard Nixon

John F. Kennedy

Cross-Domain Semantic Priming

Clinical Features of Prosopagnosia Inability to identify previously familiar people by facial features alone Intact ability to identify people using nonfacial features (voice) May extend to nonfacial stimuli May co-exist with object agnosia May take apperceptive and associative forms

Frequent Co-existing Signs Object agnosia Visual recent memory loss, and other signs of visual-limbic disconnection Superior visual field defects –Altitudinal hemianopia –Superior quadrantanopia Achromatopsia Topographical agnosia

Lesion Profile in Prosopagnosia Bilateral occipitotemporal –Extent of damage determines presence of apperceptive defect Unilateral (right) occipitotemporal –Examples from recent cases

Spared and Impaired Abilities in Prosopagnosia Prosopagnosics can: Discriminate age Discriminate gender Recognize emotions Recognize faces as such Match faces Show ‘indirect’ knowledge about faces Prosopagnosics can’t: Identify individuals Describe the owner of the face (semantics) Feel familiarity when viewing faces (Variable) identify individuals in other categories