G. Sartori et al., CATEGORY-SPECIFIC NAMING IMPAIRMENTS - YES, The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology. A, Human experimental psychology, 46(3), 1993, pp. 489-504
Recently, Stewart, Parkin, and Hunkin (1992) have questioned previousl
y reported cases of selective damage in processing items from categori
es of animate objects, arguing that there has been a lack of adequate
control for visual familiarity, visual complexity, and name frequency
of the stimuli employed. When re-testing Michelangelo (see Sartori & J
ob, 1988), one of the patients cited.by Stewart et al. (1992), with a
set of materials matched on all three factors, the asymmetry in naming
animal and artefact items still remains. An analogous pattern is obta
ined when-in addition to such factors-the visual similarity within the
sub-sets of animals and artefacts is taken into account. These result
s constitute empirical evidence for category-specific impairments and
cannot be interpreted as being due to isolated or conjoint effects of
visual familiarity, visual complexity, or name frequency.