Abstract
Twenty-four aphasic and fifteen right brain-damaged subjects were compared on their ability to identify the objects whose use was depicted in a series of twenty videotaped pantomimes. Aphasics were inferior to right brain-damaged patients in inferring object use. Success was correlated with Performance IQ, but not with language measures. Analysis of movement features contributing to subjects' choices reveal speed of movement and object weight to be the most robust and hand shape and size to be the most fragile.
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This study was supported in part by the grants from the National Institute of Health (RO1 EY07861) and McDonnell Pew Foundation (T89-01245-017) to LMV and by the USPHS grant NS06209 to H.G. and L.M.V. The authors are indebted to the staff of the Neuropsychology and Communication Disorders Departments at the New England Rehabilitation Hospital for making available the test records of the patients included in this study. All the patients included in the study have signed the informed consent forms according to the regulations of the Human Subjects Committee at New England Rehabilitation Hospital.
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Vaina, L.M., Goodglass, H. & Daltroy, L. Inference of object use from pantomimed actions by aphasics and patients with right hemisphere lesions. Synthese 104, 43–57 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01063674
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01063674