Action selection in everyday goal-directed tasks of moderate complexity is known to be Subject to breakdown following extensive frontal brain injury. A model of action selection in such tasks is presented and used to explore three hypotheses concerning the origins of action disorganisation: that it is a consequence of reduced top-down excitation within a hierarchical action schema network coupled with increased bottom-up triggering of schemas from environmental sources, that it is a more general disturbance of schema activation modelled by excessive noise in the schema network, and that it results from a general disturbance of the triggering of schemas by object representations. Results suggest that the action disorganisation syndrome is best accounted for by a general disturbance to schema activation, while altering the balance between top-down and bottom-up activation provides an account of a related disorder-utilisation behaviour. It is further suggested that ideational apraxia (which may result from lesions to left temporoparletal areas and which has similar behavioural consequences to action disorganisation syndrome on tasks of moderate complexity) is a consequence of a generalised disturbance of the triggering of schemas by object representations. Several predictions regarding differences between action disorganisation syndrome and ideational apraxia that follow from this interpretation are detailed.

The simulation of action in complex activities of daily living / Cooper, R. F; Schwartz, M. F; Yule, ; Shallice, Timothy. - In: COGNITIVE NEUROPSYCHOLOGY. - ISSN 0264-3294. - 22:8(2005), pp. 959-1004. [10.1080/02643290442000419]

The simulation of action in complex activities of daily living

Shallice, Timothy
2005-01-01

Abstract

Action selection in everyday goal-directed tasks of moderate complexity is known to be Subject to breakdown following extensive frontal brain injury. A model of action selection in such tasks is presented and used to explore three hypotheses concerning the origins of action disorganisation: that it is a consequence of reduced top-down excitation within a hierarchical action schema network coupled with increased bottom-up triggering of schemas from environmental sources, that it is a more general disturbance of schema activation modelled by excessive noise in the schema network, and that it results from a general disturbance of the triggering of schemas by object representations. Results suggest that the action disorganisation syndrome is best accounted for by a general disturbance to schema activation, while altering the balance between top-down and bottom-up activation provides an account of a related disorder-utilisation behaviour. It is further suggested that ideational apraxia (which may result from lesions to left temporoparletal areas and which has similar behavioural consequences to action disorganisation syndrome on tasks of moderate complexity) is a consequence of a generalised disturbance of the triggering of schemas by object representations. Several predictions regarding differences between action disorganisation syndrome and ideational apraxia that follow from this interpretation are detailed.
2005
22
8
959
1004
Cooper, R. F; Schwartz, M. F; Yule, ; Shallice, Timothy
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11767/30540
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