Tippett L J, McAuliffe S, Farah M J
University of Pennsylvania, USA.
Memory. 1995 Sep-Dec;3(3-4):519-33. doi: 10.1080/09658219508253163.
The distinction between knowledge of specific exemplars and knowledge of their general categories is central to much theorising on the nature of semantic memory. The dissociation between exemplar and category knowledge observed in Alzheimer's Disease (AD) would appear to support this distinction, and to suggest that different neural systems are involved in the representation of exemplar and category knowledge. We review the evidence for preserved category knowledge in the semantic memory impairment of AD, and propose an alternative interpretation, according to which category and exemplar knowledge are both represented in the same distributed neural substrate. The relative preservation of category knowledge is a consequence of the greater frequency, and hence greater robustness, of the representation of attributes shared by all or most members of a category, compared to exemplar-unique attributes. We test and confirm the computational adequacy of this hypothesis in two computer simulations.
特定范例知识与其所属一般类别的知识之间的区别,是许多关于语义记忆本质的理论的核心。在阿尔茨海默病(AD)中观察到的范例知识和类别知识之间的分离,似乎支持了这种区别,并表明不同的神经系统参与了范例知识和类别知识的表征。我们回顾了AD语义记忆损伤中类别知识得以保留的证据,并提出了另一种解释,即类别知识和范例知识都由相同的分布式神经基质表征。类别知识的相对保留是由于类别中所有或大多数成员共享的属性的表征频率更高,因此更强健,相比之下,范例独有的属性则不然。我们在两个计算机模拟中测试并证实了这一假设在计算上的充分性。