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A single case study of a patient with visual agnosia is presented. The patient had a marked impairment in visual object recognition along with good tactile object identification and a preserved ability to copy. Detailed investigations demonstrated impaired perceptual processes, with the patient's identification strongly affected by duration of stimulus exposure and by using overlapping figures. However, his stored knowledge of objects was shown to be intact. The results demonstrate that agnosia may be determined by a specific deficit in integrating form information; and that the input description for visual object recognition, disrupted in this patient, is functionally separate from stored object descriptions, which are intact. The implications of the results for understanding visual agnosia and for theories of normal visual object recognition are discussed.

More information Original publication

DOI

10.1093/brain/110.6.1431

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

1987-12-01T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

110 ( Pt 6)

Pages

1431 - 1462

Total pages

31

Keywords

Agnosia, Cerebrovascular Disorders, Color, Form Perception, Humans, Male, Memory, Middle Aged, Neuropsychological Tests, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Verbal Behavior, Visual Perception