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We present a detailed analysis of the relations between acting, naming, and recognising objects from vision, touch, and verbal labels, in a series of three cases. We demonstrate that: (1) there can be better "use" than gesturing of objects even in a patient with impaired semantic information for the objects; (2) this is contingent on direct proprioceptive feedback in action; and (3) there are impaired gestures to "non-action" parts of objects even when the patients can gesture to names and can identify the objects. These results are consistent with a "convergent route" model of action, which holds that direct, modality-specific associations between objects and actions constrain the retrieval of actions from semantic representations.

Original publication

DOI

10.1080/02643290143000097

Type

Journal article

Journal

Cogn Neuropsychol

Publication Date

01/02/2002

Volume

19

Pages

67 - 93