Abstract

The functional and neural organisation of auditory knowledge is relatively poorly understood. The breakdown of conceptual knowledge in semantic dementia has revealed that pre-morbid expertise influences the extent to which knowledge is differentiated. Whether this principle applies to a similar extent in the auditory domain is not yet known. Previous reports of patients with impaired auditory vs. intact visual expert knowledge suggest that expertise may have differential effects upon the organisation of auditory and visual knowledge. An equally plausible alternative, however, is that auditory knowledge is simply more vulnerable to deterioration. Thus, expertise effects in the auditory domain may not yet have been observed because knowledge of auditory expert vs. non-expert knowledge has yet to be compared. We had the opportunity to address this issue by studying SA, a patient with semantic dementia and extensive pre-morbid knowledge of birds. We undertook a systematic investigation of SA's auditory vs. visual knowledge from matched expert vs. non-expert categories. Relative to a group of 10 age, education and IQ matched bird experts, SA showed impaired auditory vs. intact visual avian knowledge, despite intact basic auditory perceptual abilities. This was explained by independent effects of modality and expertise. Thus, he was also disproportionately impaired for auditory vs. visual knowledge of items from non-expert categories. In both auditory and visual modalities, his performance was relatively more impaired on tests of non-expert vs. expert knowledge. These findings suggest that, while auditory knowledge may be more vulnerable to deterioration, expertise modulates visual and auditory knowledge to a similar extent.

Highlights

  • Over the past few decades significant progress has been made in furthering our understanding of the neural organisation of conceptual knowledge

  • The current study reports on SA, a bird ringing expert with pre­ dominantly right-sided semantic dementia’ (SD) like the report by Muhammed et al, (2018) another bird expert with predominantly left-sided SD, SA showed impaired auditory avian knowledge and intact visual avian knowledge

  • These findings could be taken as evidence that expertise may have differential protective effects upon auditory and visual knowledge

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Summary

Introduction

Over the past few decades significant progress has been made in furthering our understanding of the neural organisation of conceptual knowledge. Semantic knowledge of expert and non-expert cate­ gories were assessed using picture naming and picture-word matching tasks Whilst both patients showed the typical pattern of an inability to differentiate between highly similar concepts from their non-expert categories, the former automotive worker showed selective preservation of car knowledge and the former botanist showed selective preservation of information about plants, when compared against non-experts in their respective fields. These findings have important implications for understanding the organisation of conceptual knowl­ edge, as they reveal that expertise influences the extent to which knowledge is differentiated within the healthy brain. Images were manipulated to be of equal size, to in­ crease the difficulty of the test, and this was explained to the participants

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