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. 2015 Nov;19(11):677–687. doi: 10.1016/j.tics.2015.08.008

Figure 2.

Figure 2

The Nature of Category-Specific Deficits. (A) Drawings from patient SE of common objects of living and nonliving things, showing a clear absence of distinctive feature information for living things and a preservation of details for nonliving things. Nonliving objects, top left to bottom right; helicopter, chisel, anchor, windmill, bus. Living objects; crocodile, zebra, duck, penguin, camel. Reproduced from [17] with permission from Taylor and Francis. (B) MRI scan from patient SE showing extensive damage in the right anterior temporal lobe (ATL; image shown in radiological convention, previously unpublished).