Knowledge of famous faces and names in semantic dementia

被引:268
|
作者
Snowden, JS [1 ]
Thompson, JC [1 ]
Neary, D [1 ]
机构
[1] Hope Hosp, Greater Manchester Neurosci Ctr, Cerebral Funct Unit, Salford M6 8HD, Lancs, England
关键词
semantic dementia; Alzheimer's disease; face recognition; name recognition; prosopagnosia;
D O I
10.1093/brain/awh099
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Semantic dementia is a focal clinical syndrome, resulting from degeneration of the temporal lobes and characterized by progressive loss of conceptual knowledge about the world. Because of the highly circumscribed nature of the disorder it is a natural model for improving understanding of how semantic information is cerebrally represented. There is currently a lack of consensus. One view proposes the existence of modality specific meaning systems, in which visual and verbal information are stored separately. An opposing view assumes that information is represented by a unitary, amodal semantic system. The present study explores these alternatives in an examination of famous face and name knowledge in 15 patients with semantic dementia. The study of face recognition in patients with an established semantic disorder also permits an examination of the relationship between semantic dementia and the focal clinical syndrome of progressive prosopagnosia. The semantic dementia patients were profoundly impaired on both face and name identification and familiarity judgement tasks compared with amnesic patients with Alzheimer's disease and healthy controls. However, whereas the two reference groups performed better for names than faces, the semantic group showed the opposite pattern. This overall profile masked individual differences: semantic dementia patients with predominant left temporal lobe atrophy showed better recognition of names than faces, whereas patients with right temporal predominance showed the reverse pattern. Relative superiority for names or faces was mirrored by corresponding superiority for words or pictures on a standard semantic test. We interpret the findings as inconsistent with a unitary, amodal model of semantic memory. However, the data are not wholly compatible with a strict multiple system account. The data favour a model of semantic memory comprising a single interconnected network, with dedicated brain regions representing modality specific information. The data emphasize the importance of the anterior, inferolateral parts of the left temporal lobe for the representation of names and the corresponding parts of the right temporal lobe for faces. Dissociations between face and name knowledge provide a challenge for existing models of face processing. Moreover, they lead us to argue that the focal syndrome of progressive prosopagnosia is one of the clinical presentations of semantic dementia and not a separate clinical entity.
引用
收藏
页码:860 / 872
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Semantic knowledge for famous names in mild cognitive impairment
    Seidenberg, Michael
    Guidotti, Leslie
    Nielson, Kristy A.
    Woodard, John L.
    Durgerian, Sally
    Zhang, Qi
    Gander, Amelia
    Antuono, Piero
    Rao, Stephen M.
    JOURNAL OF THE INTERNATIONAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL SOCIETY, 2009, 15 (01) : 9 - 18
  • [2] Semantic knowledge and episodic memory for faces in semantic dementia
    Simons, JS
    Graham, KS
    Galton, CJ
    Patterson, K
    Hodges, JR
    NEUROPSYCHOLOGY, 2001, 15 (01) : 101 - 114
  • [3] Priming the access to names of famous faces
    Schweinberger, SR
    Burton, AM
    Kelly, SW
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 2001, 92 : 303 - 317
  • [4] Duration of Fame Influences Recognition and Semantic Knowledge of Remote Famous Names
    Abraham, M.
    Kalscheur, E.
    Kandah, C.
    Kim, W.
    Woodard, J.
    Nielson, K.
    Smith, C.
    Seidenberg, M.
    Rao, S.
    CLINICAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGIST, 2017, 31 (04) : 712 - 712
  • [5] Identification of famous faces and famous names in early Alzheimer's disease - Relationship to anterograde episodic and general semantic memory
    Greene, JDW
    Hodges, JR
    BRAIN, 1996, 119 : 111 - 128
  • [6] Duration of Fame and Extent of Semantic Knowledge of Famous Names in Cognitively Intact Older Adults
    Kalscheur, Emily J.
    Kandah, Cassandra C.
    Woodard, John L.
    Song, Woojin
    Seidenberg, Michael
    ARCHIVES OF CLINICAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGY, 2019, 34 (08) : 1382 - 1391
  • [7] The Influence of Prior Knowledge on Memory and Metamemory for Famous Names and Faces A Dual-Process Approach
    Toth, Jeffrey P.
    Daniels, Karen A.
    ZEITSCHRIFT FUR PSYCHOLOGIE-JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 2021, 229 (02): : 131 - 142
  • [8] Famous faces and voices: Differential profiles in early right and left semantic dementia and in Alzheimer's disease
    Luzzi, Simona
    Baldinelli, Sara
    Ranaldi, Valentina
    Fabi, Katia
    Cafazzo, Viviana
    Fringuelli, Fabio
    Silvestrini, Mauro
    Provinciali, Leandro
    Reverberi, Carlo
    Gainotti, Guido
    NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA, 2017, 94 : 118 - 128
  • [9] Parallel, or sequential access to semantics and proper names of famous faces?
    Abdel-Rahman, R
    Sommer, W
    Schweinberger, SR
    JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 1999, : 84 - 84
  • [10] Semantic priming in the name retrieval of objects and famous faces
    Damian, MF
    Rahman, RA
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 2003, 94 : 517 - 527