Riddoch M Jane, Humphreys Glyn W, Heslop Julia, Castermans Esther
Brain and Behavioural Sciences Centre, School of Psychology, University of Birmingham, Birmingham B15 2TT, UK.
Neurocase. 2002;8(1-2):100-10. doi: 10.1093/neucas/8.1.100.
We report the case of a patient, MC, with Alzheimer's disease, who showed poor ability to name visually presented objects and poor visual access to the concepts of objects relative to a group of control patients (also with dementia). She performed well when words instead of objects were used in the various tasks. The data suggest that she has impaired access to semantic knowledge from vision. Surprisingly, she performed well when asked to perform everyday tasks with the same objects that had proved problematic in tests of visual naming and semantics. MC's pattern of performance is consistent with there being a direct route from vision to action and with the proposal that chaining between actions allows the development of action schemas which may operate even when there is impaired access to semantic knowledge.
我们报告了一例患有阿尔茨海默病的患者MC的病例,与一组对照患者(同样患有痴呆症)相比,她在命名视觉呈现的物体方面能力较差,并且在视觉上获取物体概念的能力也较差。当在各种任务中使用单词而非物体时,她表现良好。数据表明她从视觉中获取语义知识的能力受损。令人惊讶的是,当要求她使用在视觉命名和语义测试中存在问题的相同物体执行日常任务时,她表现良好。MC的表现模式与存在从视觉到行动的直接路径以及行动之间的连锁反应允许形成行动图式的提议相一致,即使在获取语义知识受损的情况下,这些行动图式也可能发挥作用。