Literature DB >> 19255059

Posterior cerebral artery infarcts and semantic category dissociations: a study of 28 patients.

Erminio Capitani1, Marcella Laiacona, Rossella Pagani, Rita Capasso, Patrizia Zampetti, Gabriele Miceli.   

Abstract

In this study we analysed the relationship between damage in the territory of the posterior cerebral artery and semantic knowledge, with special reference to category dissociations. Twenty-eight posterior cerebral artery stroke patients (18 left, 8 right and 2 bilateral posterior cerebral artery infarctions) completed a neuropsychological battery aimed at assessing semantic knowledge. The battery included picture naming, word-picture matching, a verbal semantic questionnaire and a picture reality decision task. For each participant, the lesion was reconstructed on the basis of MRI images, and was classified according to the involvement of the areas supplied by posterior cerebral artery. Defective naming scores were observed in 12 of 18 left posterior cerebral artery cases (67%), four of eight right posterior cerebral artery cases (50%), and one of two bilateral posterior cerebral artery cases (50%). Only in the bilateral posterior cerebral artery lesion case did we observe the pattern expected in pure visual agnosia, i.e. poor picture naming, poor picture reality decision, and normal verbal semantic questionnaire. Nine left posterior cerebral artery cases and two right posterior cerebral artery cases presented with poor performance on both the picture naming task and the verbal semantic questionnaire, thus suggesting semantic impairment. For 5 of the 12 left posterior cerebral artery patients who fared poorly on the naming task, biological stimuli (overall) were significantly more impaired than artifacts. In three of these five subjects, performance on plant-life stimuli was significantly less accurate than that on animals. A further left posterior cerebral artery patient presented a disproportionate impairment on plant-life stimuli only on the word-picture matching and on the questionnaire. The patterns of performance in these subjects suggest that the observed dissociations originated at the semantic level. Among left posterior cerebral artery patients, a naming deficit only occurred when damage to the fusiform gyrus extended anterior to Talairach's y-coordinate -50, and a disproportionate impairment of biological categories only when the lesion extended anterior to y = -32.5. Results show that the semantic deficit for the category of plant life is a genuine cognitive pattern, and does not depend on loss of colour knowledge. The contrast of left posterior cerebral artery strokes and herpes simplex encephalitis cases shows that the neural substrates for the semantic representation of plant life and animals are, at least in part, distinct. Middle and posterior portions of the left fusiform are crucial for the representation of plant-life knowledge, whereas left anterior temporal areas are more crucial than left posterior and basal temporal areas for the representation of knowledge about animals.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19255059     DOI: 10.1093/brain/awp013

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain        ISSN: 0006-8950            Impact factor:   13.501


  13 in total

1.  Brain damage and semantic category dissociations: is the animals category easier for males?

Authors:  Stefania Scotti; Marcella Laiacona; Erminio Capitani
Journal:  Neurol Sci       Date:  2010-06-03       Impact factor: 3.307

2.  Revised and extended norms for a picture naming test sensitive to category dissociations.

Authors:  Marcella Laiacona; Riccardo Barbarotto; Elena Baratelli; Erminio Capitani
Journal:  Neurol Sci       Date:  2016-05-23       Impact factor: 3.307

3.  The evaluation of sources of knowledge underlying different conceptual categories.

Authors:  Guido Gainotti; Pietro Spinelli; Eugenia Scaricamazza; Camillo Marra
Journal:  Front Hum Neurosci       Date:  2013-02-21       Impact factor: 3.169

4.  Broad and narrow conceptual tuning in the human frontal lobes.

Authors:  Stephen J Gotts; Shawn C Milleville; Patrick S F Bellgowan; Alex Martin
Journal:  Cereb Cortex       Date:  2010-06-18       Impact factor: 5.357

5.  Cognitive and Functional Impairment in Stroke Survivors with Basilar Artery Occlusive Disease.

Authors:  Kenia Repiso Campanholo; Adriana Bastos Conforto; Carolina Medeiros Rimkus; Eliane Correa Miotto
Journal:  Behav Neurol       Date:  2015-06-03       Impact factor: 3.342

Review 6.  Inborn and experience-dependent models of categorical brain organization. A position paper.

Authors:  Guido Gainotti
Journal:  Front Hum Neurosci       Date:  2015-01-23       Impact factor: 3.169

7.  Processing deficits for familiar and novel faces in patients with left posterior fusiform lesions.

Authors:  Daniel J Roberts; Matthew A Lambon Ralph; Esther Kim; Marie-Josephe Tainturier; Pelagie M Beeson; Steven Z Rapcsak; Anna M Woollams
Journal:  Cortex       Date:  2015-02-26       Impact factor: 4.027

8.  Neural Representations of Belief Concepts: A Representational Similarity Approach to Social Semantics.

Authors:  Anna Leshinskaya; Juan Manuel Contreras; Alfonso Caramazza; Jason P Mitchell
Journal:  Cereb Cortex       Date:  2017-01-01       Impact factor: 5.357

9.  The role of body-related and environmental sources of knowledge in the construction of different conceptual categories.

Authors:  Guido Gainotti
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2012-10-29

10.  Efficient visual object and word recognition relies on high spatial frequency coding in the left posterior fusiform gyrus: evidence from a case-series of patients with ventral occipito-temporal cortex damage.

Authors:  Daniel J Roberts; Anna M Woollams; Esther Kim; Pelagie M Beeson; Steven Z Rapcsak; Matthew A Lambon Ralph
Journal:  Cereb Cortex       Date:  2012-08-24       Impact factor: 5.357

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