Intact first- and second-order false belief reasoning in a patient with severely impaired grammar.
The retention of first-order theory of mind (ToM) despite severe loss of grammar has been reported in two patients with left hemisphere brain damage (Varley and Siegal, 2000; Varley, Siegal, and Want, 2001). We report a third, and more detailed, case study. Patient PH shows significant general langu...
Main Authors: | Apperly, I, Samson, D, Carroll, N, Hussain, S, Humphreys, G |
---|---|
Format: | Journal article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
2006
|
Similar Items
-
Error analyses reveal contrasting deficits in "theory of mind": neuropsychological evidence from a 3-option false belief task.
by: Samson, D, et al.
Published: (2007) -
Testing the domain-specificity of a theory of mind deficit in brain-injured patients: evidence for consistent performance on non-verbal, "reality-unknown" false belief and false photograph tasks.
by: Apperly, I, et al.
Published: (2007) -
Frontal and temporo-parietal lobe contributions to theory of mind: neuropsychological evidence from a false-belief task with reduced language and executive demands.
by: Apperly, I, et al.
Published: (2004) -
Left temporoparietal junction is necessary for representing someone else's belief.
by: Samson, D, et al.
Published: (2004) -
Amygdala lesions do not compromise the cortical network for false-belief reasoning
by: Spunt, Robert P., et al.
Published: (2015)