Author:
Cubelli Roberto,Logie Robert H.,Della Sala Sergio
Abstract
Abstract
Cognitive neuropsychology uses models of cognitive processes to account for the observed patterns of spared and impaired abilities in brain-damaged individuals. In turn, this exercise supports the testing and refinement of theoretical models of human cognition. For the development of such models, the patterns of performance presented by single neuropsychological patients can be as informative as are patterns of performance from studies of cognition in healthy participants. Any conceptual, theoretical model of cognition ought to include explicit and testable predictions as to which pathological profile is expected should a component of the model be impaired. This chapter focuses on the example set of cognitive functions referred to collectively as working memory, and discusses how cognitive neuropsychology has played, and continues to play, a crucial role in the development of the multiple component model of working memory. This model, in turn, has led to significant insights into the specific nature of impairments in working memory following brain damage, as well as new, and theoretically robust forms of neuropsychological cognitive assessment. The authors argue that it is important for cognitive theorists to recognize the heuristic value of neuropsychological observations for theory development, particularly if those observations cannot readily be explained within a given theoretical framework that has been based on studies of healthy individuals. Knowledge and theoretical understanding can advance through responding to challenges as well as confirmation from observed data, and data from studies of brain-damaged individuals can offer an avenue for such advancement. To be fruitful, the relationship between theory and practice has to be reciprocal: from theory to clinical observations and from clinical observations to theory.
Publisher
Oxford University PressOxford
Reference177 articles.
1. Central executive deficit and response to operant conditioning methods.;Neuropsychological Rehabilitation,1996
2. Is the binding of visual features in working memory resource-demanding?;Journal of Experimental Psychology: General,2006
3. Feature binding and attention in working memory: A resolution of previous contradictory findings.;Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology,2012
4. Wisconsin card sorting test performance as a measure of frontal lobe damage.;Journal of Clinical Experimental Neuropsychology,1991
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献