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Newcombe, F. & Ratcliff, G. (1989), Disorders of Visupspatial Analysis, in `Handbook of Neuropsychology, Volume 2', Elsevier, New York, New York.

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This paper is cited in the following contexts:
Building Brains for Bodies - Brooks, Stein (1994)   (96 citations)  (Correct)

....level of generalization from those prompted by the verbal stimulus, dolphin . In a normal person these representations are cross linked, but in patients with certain lesions these cross links may be destroyed for particular classes of entities (e.g. for animals, but not tools) 4 Likewise (Newcombe Ratcliff 1989) demonstrate multiple parallel channels of control dependent on the task, rather than, say, a single centralized finger control module for each finger. There is a grounding of motor control in the different types of interactions the agent has with the world. 5 Nor is the control of attention ....

Newcombe, F. & Ratcliff, G. (1989), Disorders of Visupspatial Analysis, in `Handbook of Neuropsychology, Volume 2', Elsevier, New York, New York.


Intelligence Without Reason - Brooks (1991)   (450 citations)  (Correct)

....places, and may by no means be uniformly accessible. There are examples of where the knowledge is shown to be inconsistent. Our normal introspection does not reveal this organization, and would seem to be at odds with these explanations. Below, we call into question our normal introspection. Newcombe and Ratcliff 89] present a long discussion of visuospatial disorders in brain damaged patients. Many of these severely tax the model of a person as an integrated rational agent. One simple example they report is finger agnosia, where a patient may be quite impaired in the way he can carry out conscious simple ....

"Freda Newcombe and Graham Ratcliff", Disorders of Visupspatial Analysis, in Handbook of Neuropsychology, Vol 2, Elsevier, New York, NY, 1989.


Building Brains for Bodies - Brooks, Stein (1994)   (96 citations)  (Correct)

....level of generalization from those prompted by the verbal stimulus, dolphin . In a normal person these representations are cross linked, but in patients with certain lesions these cross links may be destroyed for particular classes of entities (e.g. for animals, but not tools) iv . Likewise Newcombe Ratcliff (1989) demonstrate multiple parallel channels of control dependent on the task, rather than, say, a single centralized finger control module for each finger. There is a grounding of motor control in the different types of interactions the agent has with the world v . Nor is the control of attention ....

Newcombe, F. and Ratcliff, 0. 1989. Disorders of Visupspatial Analysis. In Handbook of Neuropsychology, Volume 2, Elsevier: New York, New York.

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