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Dive into the research topics where William Hirst is active.

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Featured researches published by William Hirst.


Journal of Experimental Psychology: General | 1987

Characterizing attentional resources

William Hirst; David A. Kalmar

Other studies have found that it is easier to divide attention when messages can be discriminated on the basis of stimulus and response features. The present study extended these results and explored whether dual-task performance is a function of similarity of central processing and, more specifically, the semantic similarity of the competing messages. In a dichotic listening task, subjects detected targets in concurrent messages that either differed semantically and required different central processing (the mixed condition) or were semantically similar and required similar central processing (the same condition). Three criteria are developed to determine whether the tasks in the mixed condition call upon distinct resources. The results are discussed in terms of three metaphors for resources: fuel, structure, and skills.


Brain and Language | 1984

Constraints on the processing of indirect speech acts: evidence from aphasiology.

William Hirst; Joseph E. LeDoux; Susanna Stein

The ability of anterior aphasics and patients with right-hemisphere damage to comprehend both the literal and nonliteral readings of indirect speech acts was examined. Subjects viewed videotaped episodes in which one actor asked another Can you X? and the second actor responded with either an action or a simple Yes. Subjects judged whether the response was appropriate given its context. Anterior aphasics could comprehend the nonliteral but not the literal reading, supporting models that posit that people have direct access to nonliteral but conventional readings. Patients with right-hemisphere damage could appreciate the direct reading, but failed to distinguish between appropriate and inappropriate action-responses. This finding suggests that it may be possible to dissociate the pragmatic and syntactic aspects of comprehension of indirect speech acts.


Brain and Language | 1984

Profiles of right hemisphere language and speech following brain bisection

Michael S. Gazzaniga; Charlotte S. Smylie; Kathleen Baynes; William Hirst; Carol McCleary

A variety of language tasks were administered to two patients who had undergone staged callosal section in an effort to control otherwise intractable epilepsy. Right hemisphere lexical capacity varied and preliminary results suggest that the case displaying greater semantic power also possessed some syntactic competence. This same case (V.P.) was also capable of expressive language from the right hemisphere. This rare capacity allowed for fresh observations on the dynamic interactions of conscious control that occur in this kind of patient.


Neuropsychologia | 1984

Encoding of spatial relations with amnesia

William Hirst; Bruce T. Volpe

Incidental and intentional learning of spatial location was studied in amnesics and normals. It was found that spatial encoding of amnesics improved with instruction whereas the spatial encoding of normal adults did not. The finding suggests that spatial encoding in amnesics may be qualitatively different from that of normal adults.


Brain and Language | 1986

Semantic classification in aphasia: a study of basic, superordinate, and function relations

Carol McCleary; William Hirst

Nonfluent and fluent aphasics were given classification tasks that required the aphasics to identify three kinds of relations: same basic level category, same superordinate level category, and same function. The subjects received the items in word and picture form. In addition the aphasics were required to name the items they were asked to classify. The results showed that the ability to classify is more disrupted in fluent aphasia than in nonfluent aphasia. Within fluent aphasia, the degree to which classification is disrupted is dependent upon the type of relation being tested. While the overall performance of the fluent aphasics was depressed in comparison to nonfluent aphasics, it was significantly more depressed on function relations. The ability to name an item had a significant effect on the ability to classify only for basic level items.


Psychological Bulletin | 1982

The amnesic syndrome: Descriptions and explanations.

William Hirst


Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory and Cognition | 1986

Recognition and recall in amnesics

William Hirst; Marcia K. Johnson; Jung K. Kim; Elizabeth A. Phelps; Gail L. Risse; Bruce T. Volpe


Archive | 1986

Mind and brain : dialogues in cognitive neuroscience

Joseph E. LeDoux; William Hirst


Journal of Experimental Psychology: General | 1985

Ecological memory reconsidered: A comment on Bruce's "The how and why of ecological memory."

William Hirst; Edward Levine


Archive | 2011

Ideological Differences in Emotional Experience and Reconstructive Memory Concerning the Events of 9/11

Sean P Lane; Alison Ledgerwood; John T. Jost; Elizabeth Phelps; William Hirst

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Bruce T. Volpe

The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research

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Gail L. Risse

Hennepin County Medical Center

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