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Article Dans Une Revue Cell Reports Année : 2019

Color Categorization Independent of Color Naming

Résumé

Color is continuous, yet we group colors into discrete categories associated with color names (e.g., yellow, blue). Color categorization is a case in point in the debate on how language shapes human cognition. Evidence suggests that color categorization depends on top-down input from the language system to the visual cortex. We directly tested this hypothesis by assessing color categorization in a stroke patient, RDS, with a rare, selective deficit in naming visually presented chromatic colors, and relatively preserved achromatic color naming. Multimodal MRI revealed a left occipito-temporal lesion that directly damaged left color-biased regions, and functionally disconnected their right-hemisphere homologs from the language system. The lesion had a greater effect on RDS’s chromatic color naming than on color categorization, which was relatively preserved on a nonverbal task. Color categorization and naming can thus be independent in the human brain, challenging the mandatory involvement of language in adult human cognition.
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Dates et versions

hal-02292771 , version 1 (20-09-2019)

Identifiants

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Katarzyna Siuda-Krzywicka, Christoph Witzel, Emma Chabani, Myriam Taga, Cécile Coste, et al.. Color Categorization Independent of Color Naming. Cell Reports, 2019, 28 (10), pp.2471-2479.e5. ⟨10.1016/j.celrep.2019.08.003⟩. ⟨hal-02292771⟩
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