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・ John C. Lehr
・ John C. Lifland
・ John C. Lilly
・ John C. Lodge
・ John C. Loehlin
・ John C. Lovell
・ John C. Lozier
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John C. Marshall
・ John C. Marshall (musician)
・ John C. Martin
・ John C. Martin (businessman)
・ John C. Martin (Illinois Congressman)
・ John C. Mather
・ John C. Mather (New York)
・ John C. Maxwell
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・ John C. McKinley


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John C. Marshall : ウィキペディア英語版
John C. Marshall


John C. Marshall (1939–2007) was one of the United Kingdom's foremost experimental psychologists, whose research on language disorders and dyslexia helped pioneer the development of the influential discipline of psycholinguistics and cognitive neuropsychology.
After graduating with a BA in 1960 and a PhD in 1967 from the
University of Reading, he worked in a variety of clinical settings, researching
the effects of acquired brain damage and developmental pathology on higher
mental functions including language, spatial cognition, memory, reasoning,
and decision making. Throughout this period, he held academic teaching
and research posts at the Universities of Oxford, Edinburgh, and
Nijmegen and also held visiting positions at Harvard, McGill, and the
University of California, Los Angeles.
In 1980, he became a member of
the Medical Research Council’s External Scientific Staff and Director of the
Neuropsychology Unit at the Oxford University Department of Clinical
Neurology. In 1997, he was appointed Professor of Neuropsychology at
Oxford.
==Research==
John Marshall began his cognitive-neuropsychological career studying
impairments of word-retrieval and his research in this field continues to have
a significant and enduring impact worldwide. Alongside Freda Newcombe, he initiated some of the first cognitive neuropsychological investigations of
reading. Remarkably, he achieved this with two papers-now rightly
recognised as classics. The first on semantic errors in acquired dyslexia,
published in 1966, stimulated intensive research on deep dyslexia culminating
in the highly influential book, Deep Dyslexia, published in 1980 and coedited
by (Max Coltheart ), (Karalyn Patterson ) and Marshall. Even more
influential was his second classic paper, ''Patterns of Paralexia'' (1973)
again with Freda Newcombe which described three basic subtypes of acquired
dyslexia (surface dyslexia, deep dyslexia, and visual dyslexia)
and subsequently interpreted in relation to specific information-processing
theories of reading. This paper continues to be well cited and its
contemporary importance is shown by the fact that its citation rate per
annum continues to increase.
Marshall was also responsible for initiating and championing some of the
early cognitive-neuropsychological studies on developmental dyslexia
through his work in the 1970s and early 1980s with his students, Jane
Holmes and Christine Temple. In these landmark studies, he again drew
analogies between acquired and developmental aspects of reading disorder,
creating debates that have continued over more than 20 years. The legacy of
this approach continues to exercise a powerful impact on current investigations
of developmental dyslexia.
A second major strand of his research began in the mid-1980s when exploring
the disabling condition of visuospatial neglect. Research over the past
30 years from his group convincingly showed that, far from being a unitary
condition, neglect was a protean disorder whose symptoms could selectively
affect different sensory modalities, cognitive processes, spatial domains, and
coordinate systems. Marshall’s work helped disentangle some of the theoretical
factors that were thought to underlie the core deficits in visual neglect. For
example, it was generally assumed that patients with neglect had no
awareness of objects presented in the neglected field. However, Marshall
and Halligan (1988) showed that despite apparent unawareness for relevant
features on the affected left side, patients could be influenced by information
on the neglected side. In a second study, again published in ''Nature'', Halligan
and Marshall (1991) showed the first convincing evidence in humans for a
dissociation between extrapersonal space and peripersonal space. Subsequently,
dissociations between left neglect in peripersonal, extrapersonal
space, and more recently back space (Viaud-Delmon, Brugger, & Landis,
2007) have been reported.
Seeing the potential for applying the cognitive neuropsychological
approach to understanding psychopathology, John’s research over the past
decade has also made a significant contribution by reawakening interest in
cognitive neuropsychiatry. Examples where the approach has been explicitly used to
explain neuropsychiatric conditions include hallucinations, supernumerary
phantom limbs (Halligan, Marshall, & Wade, 1994), reduplication,
somatoparaphrenia, and hysterical conversion (Halligan & David, 1999;
Marshall, Halligan, Fink, Wade, & Frackowiak, 1997), not to mention
publication of one of the first books that helped inspire and refine the field
of cognitive neuropsychiatry, (Method in Madness ) (Halligan & Marshall,
1996) as an emerging subdiscipline.
Despite originally questioning ‘whether neuroimaging was ever going to
contribute to neuroscience’’Marshall in the mid-1990s, began a series of
cognitive neuroscience studies first at the FIL in London but subsequently with Gereon Fink in Cologne that explicitly made use of functional
neuroimaging techniques such as positron emission tomography (PET)
and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to address specific
research questions (Fink, Marshall, Noth, & Zilles, 2003). These studies
explored the underlying neuroanatomy/neurophysiology implicated by
traditional psychological tasks thereby allowing a direct and important
comparison with lesion-based results.

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