T
Tim Shallice
Researcher at University College London
Publications - 293
Citations - 52506
Tim Shallice is an academic researcher from University College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cognition & Frontal lobe. The author has an hindex of 94, co-authored 291 publications receiving 50959 citations. Previous affiliations of Tim Shallice include University of London & University of Cambridge.
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Two qualitatively different impairments in making rotation operations
TL;DR: Two groups of patients were found to be impaired in this study, namely the left prefrontal and the right parietal, and the left frontal patients showed a broader mental rotation impairment with a significant number of metric errors.
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Zero in the brain: a voxel-based lesion-symptom mapping study in right hemisphere damaged patients
Silvia Benavides-Varela,Laura Passarini,Brian Butterworth,Giuseppe Rolma,Francesca Burgio,Marco Pitteri,Francesca Meneghello,Tim Shallice,Carlo Semenza +8 more
TL;DR: It is argued that damage to the right hemisphere impairs the mechanism of parsing, and the ability to set-up empty-slot structures required for processing zeros in complex numbers, and suggested that the brain areas located in proximity to theright insula play a role in the integration of the information resulting from the temporary application of transcoding procedures.
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Types of case series—the anatomically based approach: Commentary on M. F. Schwartz & G. S. Dell: Case series investigations in cognitive neuropsychology
Tim Shallice,Tania Buiatti +1 more
TL;DR: The paper addresses a weakness in the Schwartz and Dell paper (2010)—namely, its discussion of the inclusion criteria for case series and distinguishes the different types that exist and how they constrain the theoretical conclusions about the organization of the normal cognitive system.
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Towards a systematic methodology for cognitive modelling
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When does a strategy intervention overcome a failure of inhibition? Evidence from two left frontal brain tumour cases.
TL;DR: It is suggested that KI has both fast, uncontrolled semantic output and response inhibition difficulty, whereas PM's difficulty is underpinned by motivational factors.