Comparative Neuropsychology
Edited by A. David Milner
Table of Contents
1. Introduction: comparative neuropsychology, A D Miller
2. Sensory factors in human visual agnosia, A W Young
3. Ettlinger at Bay: can visual agnosia be explained by low-level visual impairments?, A Cowey, P Dean, & L Weiskrantz
4. Cross-modal associations, intramodal associations, and object identification in macaque monkeys, E A Murray, L. Malkova, & S Goulet
5. Visual processing in the primate parietal lobe, A D Milner & H C Dijkerman
6. Memory and the human temporal lobes, J M Oxbury & S M Oxbury
7. Memory systems in primates: episodic, semantic, and perceptual learning, A Parker & D Gaffan
8. Interhemispheric transfer following partial commissurotomy in man and monkey, M J Eacott
9. Visual integration in callosal agenesis, M A Jeeves
10. Towards a unified view of cerebral hemispheric specializations in vertebrates, P Macneilage
11. Brain mechanisms of apraxia, U Halsband
12. Perspectives on visuospatial neglect, M Harvey
13. Cognition in great apes, R W Byrne
14. Mental representation in human and monkey neuropsychology, R M Ridley & H F Baker
15. The specialization of the human neocortex, R E Passingham