Impaired Verbal Category Learning in Amnesia

Amnesic patients and controls listened to verbal descriptions of imaginary animals and then classified novel descriptions according to whether they belonged to the studied category. Controls performed well, but the amnesic patients did not acquire categorical knowledge. These findings contrast with...

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Veröffentlicht in:Behavioral neuroscience 2000-10, Vol.114 (5), p.907-911
Hauptverfasser: Kitchener, Erin G, Squire, Larry R
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creator Kitchener, Erin G
Squire, Larry R
description Amnesic patients and controls listened to verbal descriptions of imaginary animals and then classified novel descriptions according to whether they belonged to the studied category. Controls performed well, but the amnesic patients did not acquire categorical knowledge. These findings contrast with previous demonstrations of intact category learning by amnesic patients for dot patterns, artificial grammars, and cartoon animals. It appears that category knowledge can be acquired implicitly when training exemplars are presented visually and when the similarities among items can be readily perceived. Verbal category learning requires the extraction and retention of meaning from training exemplars that are separated in time and may make demands on declarative memory that are beyond the capacity of amnesic patients.
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subjects Adult and adolescent clinical studies
Amnesia
Amnesia - diagnosis
Amnesia - physiopathology
Atrophy - pathology
Biological and medical sciences
Brain Damage
Classification
Classification (Cognitive Process)
Female
Frontal Lobe - pathology
Hippocampus - pathology
Human
Humans
Learning
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Male
Medical sciences
Memory
Neurological disorders
Neuropsychological Tests
Organic mental disorders. Neuropsychology
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychopathology. Psychiatry
Severity of Illness Index
Thalamus - pathology
Verbal Learning
Verbal Learning - physiology
Verbal Memory
Verbal Stimuli
title Impaired Verbal Category Learning in Amnesia
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