Medicina: Neuropsicologia cognitiva
English |
semantic knowledge |
|
|
Attestation |
3
|
Part of speech |
Noun phrase
|
Phraseology |
To mobilize semantic knowledge, To activate semantic knowledge.
|
Definition |
Relationship existing between an object (or event) and the general knowledge we have about that object (or event). Relationship existing between an object (or event) and the general knowledge we have about that object (or event): i.e. cat: animal, pet, mammal, mewing.
|
Definition source |
Vista-Mead 2001 Vista-Mead 2001
|
Context |
Such an assumption holds only if there is a single route from vision to action, mediated by access to semantic knowledge. At least two pieces of evidence contradict this assumption. Riddoch and Humphreys (1987) reported the case of a patient (J.B.) who was impaired both at naming and at matching functionally associated objects, from vision. In contrast, when given the names of the objects J.B. performed at ceiling level. Despite his apparent problems in visual access to semantic or functional knowledge, J.B. was generally good at making correct gestures to objects he failed to identify.
|
Context source |
Riddoch et al. 1994
|
Quasi-synonym |
Semantic system, Semantic memory
|
Subject field |
Aphasia
|
Sub-field (level 1) |
Aphasiology
|
Sub-field (level 2) |
Cognitive neuropsychology
|
Sub-field (level 3) |
Lexical processing system
|
Comprehensive concept |
Lexical processing system
|
Related concept |
Auditory input lexicon, Visual input lexicon, Grapheme-phoneme conversion route, Phonological buffer, Graphemic buffer, Auditory input, Tactile input, Visual input, Orthographic input, Orthographic output lexicon, Phonological output lexicon, Verbal output, Written output, Phoneme-grapheme conversion, Input lexicons, Output lexicons
|
it |
Semantica di una forma lessicale
|
Reliability code |
3
|
|