What are the two forms of prosopagnosia?
Acquired and Developmental
Apperceptive and Asscociative
Dorsal and Ventral
Category Specific and Amusia
Optic and Associative
Someone with dorsal simultanagnosia would have problems with...
Naming single objects
Recognising multiple objects in a scene
Grasping an object
Recognise elements of an object
See colour
What are the three stages in the three stage model of object perception?
Local features, shape representation, object representation
Primary, secondary, tertiary
Local features, global features, object recognition
Local features, form representation, object recognition
Local features, depth representation, object perception
Someone with dorsal simultagnosia may also have difficulty with...
Speech and singing
Colour and form deficits
Gaze, pointing and reaching
Articulation deficits
A disorder which results in difficulty in recognising faces is called?
Prosopagnosia
Topographic Agnosia
Visual Agnosia
Face Agnosia
Ventral Simaltanagnosia
Retrieval failure...
Results from damage to the hippocampus
Causes retrograde amnesia but not anterograde amnesia
Causes anterograde but not retrograde amnesia
Can be demonstrated by recognition memory being better than recall
Multiple Trace Theory...
Provides an account for non-graded retrograde amnesia
Describes the handing over of memories to the cortex
Has difficulty accounting for non-graded retrograde amnesia
Provides a better account for retrieval failure
Anterograde amnesia is rare compared to retrograde amnesia
Which of the following describes loss of memory through retrograde amnesia?
Last in first to go
Last in last to go
First in first to go
Memory is affected equally independent of time
Which of the following is a characteristic of Standard Consolidation Theory
Describes memories being handed over to the cortex
Has trouble predicting graded retrograde amnesia
Memories held permanently in the hippocampus
Only considers retrograde amnesia