Advertisement
Leg Condition Centre
Yes, that's right. We now have a Leg Centre. Leg injuries, leg exercises and celebrity legs.
Anxiety: a female thing?
Anxiety disorders are very common and women are more likely than men to be anxious.
     TERMS     GET A DAILY HEALTH TIP  
  
MAKE HEALTH24 YOUR HOMEPAGE   
H24 NEWS MEDICAL SCHEMES DIET FITNESS NATURAL MAN WOMAN SEX PREGNANCY CHILD TEEN SUN
FOCUS CENTRES MEDS ORAL PET MIND GRAPHICS VIDEOS ANTI-AGEING WIN TOOLS EXPERTS TALK FIND

Links
 Child
 Teens
 Healthy home
 Erectile dysfunction
 Find a buddy
 Body Under Construction
 Prostate Centre
 Fitness
 Sexuality
 Diet & Food
 Psychology

Brain, memory and cognition
Brain stores knowledge and colour separately
Knowing that an orange is a fruit and that an orange is orange are retrieved from different parts of your brain, new research shows.

A study of a woman whose brain was damaged by stroke shows that knowledge about an object and information about its colour are segregated in the brain, not all crammed together in the same place. The study provides researchers with important new clues as to how knowledge is organised in the brain.

 
Advertisement
"What we've been trying to figure out is how the brain is organised, how it carries out the remarkable tasks of language and of reasoning out the world," says Alfonso Caramazza, a professor of psychology in Harvard University's Cognitive Neuropsychology Laboratory. "And what our study shows is that multiple levels of information are processed in different parts of the brain and processed in different ways."

Caramazza and his colleagues say the stroke left the woman without the ability to link colours to objects.

"The picture of her stroke was quite complex, as it is in most cases of brain damage," Caramazza says. "She had extremely severe difficulties in actually naming objects, but what was remarkable about the patient is that she was essentially spared the knowledge of the object she could not name."

"If you asked her to name a chair, she'd have trouble naming it," Caramazza says. "But she knew it was a chair. And what was especially remarkable is that she could provide you, in exquisite detail, information about a banana, for instance: that you eat it, where it grows, its shape. And if you gave her a colour chart, she could identify all the colours without any problem and she could name all the colours."

"But she could not tell you that a banana was typically yellow, and she had difficulty saying that a fire truck was typically red," he says.

The study shows that the knowledge of an object like a banana or a fire truck and the properties of that object are stored independently in the brain, Caramazza says. "Knowledge of what red is independent of the knowledge that a fire truck is red," Caramazza says. "What this study leaves unanswered is how the brain creates a unified representation of a yellow banana or a red fire truck. What we now know is that the brain pulls from different areas the information necessary to create a whole picture of an object."

The findings were published in June's issue of Nature Neuroscience.

"These are extremely exciting findings that are consistent with clues from our earlier imaging studies," says Alex Martin, chief of the National Institute of Mental Health's Section on Cognitive Neuropyschology. "This really demonstrates the separation between perception and knowing, but also demonstrates the separation between knowing about one type of feature of an object, like colour versus another feature, like form."

Martin says understanding how the brain is organised answers a "basic question about human cognition, to the extent that people think it's important to understand how memory is organised and how the brain works."

"Our hope is that understanding brain organisation will provide us with some clues as to how to help people with brain damage, like those who are having trouble remembering names, for example," Martin says.

Post a question to Cybershrink.

The Heart and Stroke Foundation South Africa
 
Print this article
 Rate this article
Poor 1 2 3 4 5 Excellent

 JOBS
Financial Manager
R500,000-550,000 Per Annum Cost To Company
Gauteng
Chief Financial Officer (Chartered Accountant)
R1000,000-1500,000 Per Month Cost To Company
Gauteng
Tax Consultant (Chartered Accountant) AA preferably
R300,000-500,000 Per Annum Cost To Company
Western Cape - Cape Town
Financial Manager/Financial Operations (Chartered Accountant)
R380,000-500,000 Per Annum Cost To Company
Gauteng
Training Specialist
R250,000-320,000 Per Annum Cost To Company
Gauteng - East Rand
CFO
Gauteng
Human Resources Manager
R420,000-540,000 Per Month Cost To Company
Gauteng
Chief Financial Officer
R900,000-901,000 Per Month Cost To Company
Gauteng
Previous Next
 
Subscribe to...
*Daily tip
*Weekly tip
Want to subscribe to our newsletters?
Click here.
*Stand a chance to win R1000 every month!

 
 Other articles
Fascinating brain facts
Flex your mind
Try these brain exercises
Mind better than a calculator
Active people less prone to Alzheimer's
A cure for memory problems?
Memory test
Mental workouts keep Alzheimer's at bay
Ten signs of a memory illness
Brain stores knowledge and colour separately
Causes of intellectual disability
Symptoms of intellectual disability
Think you're smart?
Some days you remember better than others
Too drunk to remember?
Coping with examination stress, part I
Coping with exam stress, part II
Sharp focus on the brain
Links to Brain Awareness Week Partners
Should you be concerned about your memory?
How to exercise your mind
Few regrets when brain is damaged
Where long-term memories go
Bok hero's life with dementia
Career choice, dementia linked
Why some see auras
Few jobs for SA disabled
Human brain is no computer
Hormone linked to aggression
Keep your brain fit
Intellectual disability month
The mystifying brain
Your brain, your control room
How brain injury may affect you
Brain injury affects everyone
The perfect knockout punch
Brain workouts keep dementia at bay
Brain death: when is it all over?
Brain weight matters
 Sponsored links
 Health24 links

Advertisement
 Top Condition
 Centres

 

© Health24 2000-2008. All rights reserved
  
We comply with the HONcode standard for trustworthy health
information.
Verify here.