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1.
J Autism Dev Disord ; 53(12): 4787-4808, 2023 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36173532

ABSTRACT

Autism traits are common exclusionary criteria in developmental prosopagnosia (DP) studies. We investigated whether autism traits produce qualitatively different face processing in 43 DPs with high vs. low autism quotient (AQ) scores. Compared to controls (n = 27), face memory and perception were similarly deficient in the high- and low-AQ DPs, with the high-AQ DP group additionally showing deficient face emotion recognition. Task-based fMRI revealed reduced occipito-temporal face selectivity in both groups, with high-AQ DPs additionally demonstrating decreased posterior superior temporal sulcus selectivity. Resting-state fMRI showed similar reduced face-selective network connectivity in both DP groups compared with controls. Together, this demonstrates that high- and low-AQ DP groups have very similar face processing deficits, with additional facial emotion deficits in high-AQ DPs.


Subject(s)
Autism Spectrum Disorder , Autistic Disorder , Facial Recognition , Prosopagnosia , Humans , Prosopagnosia/psychology , Autistic Disorder/diagnostic imaging , Autism Spectrum Disorder/diagnostic imaging , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Pattern Recognition, Visual
2.
Neuropsychologia ; 124: 87-97, 2019 02 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30625291

ABSTRACT

Studies of developmental prosopagnosia have often shown that developmental prosopagnosia differentially affects human face processing over non-face object processing. However, little consideration has been given to whether this condition is associated with perceptual or sensorimotor impairments in other modalities. Comorbidities have played a role in theories of other developmental disorders such as dyslexia, but studies of developmental prosopagnosia have often focused on the nature of the visual recognition impairment despite evidence for widespread neural anomalies that might affect other sensorimotor systems. We studied 12 subjects with developmental prosopagnosia with a battery of auditory tests evaluating pitch and rhythm processing as well as voice perception and recognition. Overall, three subjects were impaired in fine pitch discrimination, a prevalence of 25% that is higher than the estimated 4% prevalence of congenital amusia in the general population. This was a selective deficit, as rhythm perception was unaffected in all 12 subjects. Furthermore, two of the three prosopagnosic subjects who were impaired in pitch discrimination had intact voice perception and recognition, while two of the remaining nine subjects had impaired voice recognition but intact pitch perception. These results indicate that, in some subjects with developmental prosopagnosia, the face recognition deficit is not an isolated impairment but is associated with deficits in other domains, such as auditory perception. These deficits may form part of a broader syndrome which could be due to distributed microstructural anomalies in various brain networks, possibly with a common theme of right hemispheric predominance.


Subject(s)
Pitch Perception , Prosopagnosia/psychology , Acoustic Stimulation , Adult , Aged , Auditory Perceptual Disorders/etiology , Auditory Perceptual Disorders/psychology , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Music , Prosopagnosia/complications , Psychological Tests , Recognition, Psychology , Speech Perception , Young Adult
3.
Brain Lang ; 149: 106-17, 2015 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26197259

ABSTRACT

A 20-year old female, AN, with no history of neurological events or detectable lesions, was markedly poorer than controls at identifying her most familiar celebrity voices. She was normal at face recognition and in discriminating which of two speakers uttered a particular sentence. She evidences normal fMRI sensitivity for human speech and non-speech sounds. AN, and two other phonagnosics, were unable to imagine the voices of highly familiar individuals. A region in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) was differentially activated in controls when imagining familiar celebrity voices compared to imagining non-voice sounds. AN evidenced no differential activation in this area, which has been termed a person identity semantic system. Rather than a deficit in the representation of voice-individuating cues, AN may be unable to associate those cues to the identity of a familiar person. In this respect, the deficit in developmental phonagnosia may bear a striking parallel to developmental prosopagnosia.


Subject(s)
Prosopagnosia/physiopathology , Prosopagnosia/psychology , Recognition, Psychology , Voice , Acoustic Stimulation , Adult , Aged , Cues , Facial Recognition/physiology , Female , Humans , Imagery, Psychotherapy , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Middle Aged , Photic Stimulation , Prefrontal Cortex/physiology , Speech , White Matter , Young Adult
4.
Conscious Cogn ; 22(4): 1510-22, 2013 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24201142

ABSTRACT

Mirrored-self misidentification is the delusional belief that one's own reflection in the mirror is a stranger. In two experiments, we tested the ability of hypnotic suggestion to model this condition. In Experiment 1, we compared two suggestions based on either the delusion's surface features (seeing a stranger in the mirror) or underlying processes (impaired face processing). Fifty-two high hypnotisable participants received one of these suggestions either with hypnosis or without in a wake control. In Experiment 2, we examined the extent to which social cues and role-playing could account for participants' behaviour by comparing the responses of 14 hypnotised participants to the suggestion for impaired face processing (reals) with those of 14 nonhypnotised participants instructed to fake their responses (simulators). Overall, results from both experiments confirm that we can use hypnotic suggestion to produce a compelling analogue of mirrored-self misidentification that cannot simply be attributed to social cues or role-playing.


Subject(s)
Delusions/psychology , Hypnosis , Recognition, Psychology , Self Concept , Suggestion , Adolescent , Adult , Face , Female , Humans , Male , Models, Psychological , Pattern Recognition, Visual , Prosopagnosia/psychology , Young Adult
5.
Neuropsychologia ; 49(9): 2541-52, 2011 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21601583

ABSTRACT

It has long been argued that face processing requires disproportionate reliance on holistic or configural processing, relative to that required for non-face object recognition, and that a disruption of such holistic processing may be causally implicated in prosopagnosia. Previously, we demonstrated that individuals with congenital prosopagnosia (CP) did not show the normal face inversion effect (better performance for upright compared to inverted faces) and evinced a local (rather than the normal global) bias in a compound letter global/local (GL) task, supporting the claim of disrupted holistic processing in prosopagnosia. Here, we investigate further the nature of holistic processing impairments in CP, first by confirming, in a large sample of CP individuals, the absence of the normal face inversion effect and the presence of the local bias on the GL task, and, second, by employing the composite face paradigm, often regarded as the gold standard for measuring holistic face processing. In this last task, we show that, in contrast with controls, the CP group perform equivalently with aligned and misaligned faces and was impervious to (the normal) interference from the task-irrelevant bottom part of faces. Interestingly, the extent of the local bias evident in the composite task is correlated with the abnormality of performance on diagnostic face processing tasks. Furthermore, there is a significant correlation between the magnitude of the local bias in the GL and performance on the composite task. These results provide further evidence for impaired holistic processing in CP and, moreover, corroborate the critical role of this type of processing for intact face recognition.


Subject(s)
Discrimination, Psychological/physiology , Face , Mental Processes/physiology , Prosopagnosia/congenital , Recognition, Psychology/physiology , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Case-Control Studies , Female , Humans , Male , Matched-Pair Analysis , Middle Aged , Pattern Recognition, Visual/physiology , Photic Stimulation , Prosopagnosia/physiopathology , Prosopagnosia/psychology , Reference Values
6.
Neuropsychologia ; 49(9): 2505-13, 2011 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21570991

ABSTRACT

Faces of one's own race are discriminated and recognized more accurately than faces of an other race (other-race effect - ORE). Studies have employed several methods to enhance individuation and recognition of other-race faces and reduce the ORE, including intensive perceptual training with other-race faces and explicitly instructing participants to individuate other-race faces. Unfortunately, intensive perceptual training has shown to be specific to the race trained and the use of explicit individuation strategies, though applicable to all races, can be demanding of attention and difficult to consistently employ. It has not yet been demonstrated that a training procedure can foster the automatic individuation of all other-race faces, not just faces from the race trained. Anecdotal evidence from a training procedure used with developmental prosopagnosics (DPs) in our lab, individuals with lifelong face recognition impairments, suggests that this may be possible. To further test this idea, we had five Caucasian DPs perform ten days of configural face training (i.e. attending to small spacing differences between facial features) with own-race (Caucasian) faces to see if training would generalize to improvements with other-race (Korean) faces. To assess training effects and localize potential effects to parts-based or holistic processing, we used the part-whole task using Caucasian and Korean faces (Tanaka, J. W., Kiefer, M., & Bukach, C. M. (2004). A holistic account of the own-race effect in face recognition: evidence from a cross-cultural study. Cognition, 93(1), B1-9). Results demonstrated that after training, DPs showed a disproportionate improvement in holistic processing of other-race faces compared to own-race faces, reducing their ORE. This suggests that configural training with own-race faces boosted DPs' general configural/holistic attentional resources, which they were able to apply to other-race faces. This provides a novel method to reduce the ORE and supports more of an attentional/social-cognitive model of the ORE rather than a strictly expertise model.


Subject(s)
Discrimination, Psychological , Face , Practice, Psychological , Prosopagnosia/psychology , Recognition, Psychology , Adult , Asian People , Case-Control Studies , Female , Humans , Male , Pattern Recognition, Visual , Prosopagnosia/physiopathology , Reference Values , White People
9.
Cortex ; 46(9): 1189-98, 2010 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20434142

ABSTRACT

It has been reported that congenital prosopagnosics may have a general imagery deficit or an imagery deficit specific to faces. However, much of this evidence is based on self-report questionnaires, rather than experimentally based testing (Grüter et al., 2007, 2009). This study tested face and non-face based imagery in a case series of congenital prosopagnosics, utilising both questionnaire based and forced choice accuracy measures. Our findings indicate that all the prosopagnosics showed impaired face based imagery, which contrasted with normal performance on imagery of objects and colours - a pattern that is consistent with reports of acquired prosopagnosia (Barton, 2008; Michelon and Biederman, 2003). Given all our experimentally based testing indicated face imagery impairments, despite no such problems being seen on self-report questionnaires, we would argue that testing based only on the latter must be interpreted with some caution. Overall, we would advocate that our findings demonstrate a category specific visual imagery impairment in congenital prosopagnosia, such that general imagery skill can be intact in such cases.


Subject(s)
Choice Behavior , Face , Memory , Pattern Recognition, Visual , Prosopagnosia/congenital , Prosopagnosia/psychology , Verbal Learning , Adult , Female , Humans , Imagination , Male , Middle Aged , Neuropsychological Tests , Surveys and Questionnaires
10.
Neuropsychologia ; 47(13): 2798-811, 2009 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19524599

ABSTRACT

Understanding the interaction between the configural and part-based systems in face recognition is the major aim of this study. Specifically, we established whether configural representation of faces contribute to aspects of face recognition that depend on part-based processes, such as identifying inverted or fractured faces. Using face recognition tasks that require part-based or configural processing, we compared the results of CK--a man who has object agnosia and alexia [Moscovitch, M., Winocur, G., & Behrmann, M. (1997). What is special about face recognition? Nineteen experiments on a person with visual object agnosia and dyslexia but normal face recognition. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 9(5), 555-604] but normal upright face recognition, to those of DC--a man who has prosopagnosia but normal object recognition. CK was normal at recognizing faces if configural processing was sufficient, but poor at recognizing faces that were modified so as to alter their gestalt, and require part-based processing (Moscovitch et al.). DC was impaired at recognizing upright faces and his performance declined in all tasks involving recognition of modified faces, including those that depend on part-based and on configural processing. Nevertheless, DC was normal on tasks involving perception of generic faces and face imagery. These results show that although configural face perception can proceed without part-based processing, the reverse is not the case. Our results suggest that the configural system is always necessary for face recognition, and appears to support what remains of face identification even in prosopagnosic people who have an intact part-based system.


Subject(s)
Pattern Recognition, Visual/physiology , Prosopagnosia/psychology , Agnosia/complications , Agnosia/psychology , Brain/pathology , Case-Control Studies , Dyslexia/complications , Dyslexia/psychology , Female , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Middle Aged , Prosopagnosia/physiopathology
11.
Neurosci Lett ; 453(3): 135-40, 2009 Apr 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19429021

ABSTRACT

Congenital prosopagnosia (cPA) is a selective impairment in the visual learning and recognition of faces without detectable brain damage or malformation. There is evidence that it can be inherited in an autosomal dominant mode of inheritance. We assessed the capacity for visual mental imagery in 53 people with cPA using an adapted Marks' VVIQ (Vividness of Visual Imaging Questionnaire). The mean score of the prosopagnosic group showed the lowest mental imagery scores ever published for a non-brain damaged group. In a subsample of 12 people with cPA, we demonstrated that the cPA is a deficit of configural face processing. We suggest that the 'VVIQ-PA' (VVIQ-Prosopagnosia) questionnaire can help to confirm the diagnosis of cPA. Poor mental imagery, a configural face processing impairment and clinical prosopagnosia should be considered as symptoms of a yet poorly understood hereditary cerebral dysfunction.


Subject(s)
Imagination , Pattern Recognition, Visual , Prosopagnosia/psychology , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Face , Humans , Middle Aged , Prosopagnosia/congenital , Young Adult
12.
J Neuropsychol ; 2(1): 197-225, 2008 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19334311

ABSTRACT

Acquired prosopagnosia varies in both behavioural manifestations and the location and extent of underlying lesions. We studied 10 patients with adult-onset lesions on a battery of face-processing tests. Using signal detection methods, we found that discriminative power for the familiarity of famous faces was most reduced by bilateral occipitotemporal lesions that involved the fusiform gyri, and better preserved with unilateral right-sided lesions. Tests of perception of facial structural configuration showed severe deficits with lesions that included the right fusiform gyrus, whether unilateral or bilateral. This deficit was most consistent for eye configuration, with some patients performing normally for mouth configuration. Patients with anterior temporal lesions had better configuration perception, though at least one patient showed a more subtle failure to integrate configural data from different facial regions. Facial imagery, an index of facial memories, was severely impaired by bilateral lesions that included the right anterior temporal lobe and marginally impaired by fusiform lesions alone; unilateral right fusiform lesions tended to spare imagery for facial features. These findings suggest that (I) prosopagnosia is more severe with bilateral than unilateral lesions, indicating a minor contribution of the left hemisphere to face recognition, (2) perception of facial configuration critically involves the right fusiform gyrus and (3) access to facial memories is most disrupted by bilateral lesions that also include the right anterior temporal lobe. This supports assertions that more apperceptive variants of prosopagnosia are linked to fusiform damage, whereas more associative variants are linked to anterior temporal damage. Next, we found that behavioural indices of covert recognition correlated with measures of overt familiarity, consistent with theories that covert behaviour emerges from the output of damaged neural networks, rather than alternative pathways. Finally, to probe the face specificity of the prosopagnosic defect, we tested recognition of fruits and vegetables: While face specificity was not found in most of our patients, the data of one patient suggested that this may be possible with more focal lesions of the right fusiform gyrus.


Subject(s)
Brain Damage, Chronic/pathology , Brain Damage, Chronic/psychology , Prosopagnosia/pathology , Prosopagnosia/psychology , Accidents, Traffic , Adult , Brain Damage, Chronic/complications , Cerebral Hemorrhage/complications , Cerebral Hemorrhage/pathology , Cerebral Hemorrhage/psychology , Cerebral Infarction/complications , Cerebral Infarction/pathology , Cerebral Infarction/psychology , Cohort Studies , Discrimination, Psychological/physiology , Encephalitis, Viral/complications , Encephalitis, Viral/pathology , Encephalitis, Viral/psychology , Epilepsy, Complex Partial/surgery , Female , Functional Laterality/physiology , Head Injuries, Closed/complications , Head Injuries, Closed/pathology , Head Injuries, Closed/psychology , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Middle Aged , Neurosurgical Procedures/adverse effects , Occipital Lobe/pathology , Prosopagnosia/etiology , Recognition, Psychology/physiology , Stroke/complications , Stroke/pathology , Stroke/psychology , Temporal Lobe/pathology , Wounds, Gunshot/complications , Wounds, Gunshot/pathology , Wounds, Gunshot/psychology
13.
J Neuropsychol ; 2(1): 269-86, 2008 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19334314

ABSTRACT

Voices, in addition to faces, enable person identification. Voice recognition has been shown to evoke a distributed network of brain regions that includes, in addition to the superior temporal sulcus (STS), the anterior temporal pole, fusiform face area (FFA), and posterior cingulate gyrus (pCG). Here we report an individual (MS) with acquired prosopagnosia who, despite bilateral damage to much of this network, demonstrates the ability to distinguish voices of several well-known acquaintances from voices of people that he has never heard before. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) revealed that, relative to speech-modulated noise, voices rated as familiar and unfamiliar by MS elicited enhanced haemodynamic activity in the left angular gyrus, left posterior STS, and posterior midline brain regions, including the retrosplenial cortex and the dorsal pCG. More interestingly, relative to noise and unfamiliar voices, the familiar voices elicited greater haemodynamic activity in the left angular gyrus and medial parietal regions including the dorsal pCG and precuneus. The findings are consistent with theories implicating the pCG in recognizing people who are personally familiar, and furthermore suggest that the pCG region of the voice identification network is able to make functional contributions to voice recognition even though other areas of the network, namely the anterior temporal poles, FFA, and the right parietal lobe, may be compromised.


Subject(s)
Gyrus Cinguli/pathology , Prosopagnosia/pathology , Prosopagnosia/psychology , Recognition, Psychology/physiology , Voice , Acoustic Stimulation , Amnesia/etiology , Amnesia/pathology , Amnesia/psychology , Color Vision Defects/etiology , Color Vision Defects/pathology , Color Vision Defects/psychology , Data Interpretation, Statistical , Encephalitis, Herpes Simplex/complications , Encephalitis, Herpes Simplex/pathology , Encephalitis, Herpes Simplex/psychology , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Middle Aged , Nerve Net/pathology , Prosopagnosia/etiology , Psychomotor Performance/physiology
14.
Exp Brain Res ; 181(2): 199-211, 2007 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17361425

ABSTRACT

The scan patterns of ocular fixations made by prosopagnosic patients while they attempt to identify faces may provide insights into how they process the information in faces. Contrasts between their scanning of upright versus inverted faces may index the presence of a hypothesized orientation-dependent expert mechanism for processing faces, while contrasts between their scanning of familiar versus novel faces may index the influence of residual facial memories on their search for meaningful facial information. We recorded the eye movements of two prosopagnosics while they viewed faces. One patient, with acquired prosopagnosia from a right occipitotemporal lesion, showed degraded orientation effects but still with a normal distribution of fixations to more salient facial features. However, the dynamics of his global scan patterns were more chaotic for novel faces, suggesting degradation of an internal facial schema, and consistent with other evidence of impaired face configuration perception in this patient. His global scan patterns for famous faces differed from novel faces, suggesting the influence of residual facial memories, as indexed previously by his relatively good imagery for famous faces. The other patient, with a developmental prosopagnosia, showed anomalous orientation effects, abnormal distribution of fixations to less salient regions, and chaotic global scan patterns, in keeping with a more severe loss of face-expert mechanisms. The effects of fame on her scanning were weaker than those in the first subject and non-existent in her global scan patterns. We conclude that scan patterns in prosopagnosia can both reflect the loss of orientation-dependent expert mechanisms and index the covert influence of residual facial memories. In these two subjects the scanning data were consistent with other results from tests of configuration perception, imagery, and covert recognition.


Subject(s)
Prosopagnosia/physiopathology , Prosopagnosia/psychology , Recognition, Psychology/physiology , Adult , Brain/pathology , Brain Neoplasms/complications , Brain Neoplasms/surgery , Cerebral Hemorrhage/etiology , Cerebral Hemorrhage/psychology , Data Interpretation, Statistical , Epilepsy, Generalized/psychology , Eye Movements/physiology , Face , Female , Fixation, Ocular , Functional Laterality/physiology , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Markov Chains , Memory/physiology , Middle Aged , Neuropsychological Tests , Oligodendroglioma/complications , Oligodendroglioma/surgery , Orientation/physiology , Psychomotor Performance/physiology , Visual Perception/physiology
15.
Brain ; 127(Pt 8): 1706-16, 2004 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15215211

ABSTRACT

It has been hypothesized that social developmental disorders (SDD) like autism, Asperger's disorder and the social-emotional processing disorder may be associated with prosopagnosic-like deficits in face recognition. We studied the ability to recognize famous faces in 24 adults with a variety of SDD diagnoses. We also measured their ability to discriminate changes in internal facial configuration, a perceptual function that is important in face recognition, and their imagery for famous faces, an index of their facial memory stores. We contrasted their performance with both healthy subjects and prosopagnosic patients. We also performed a cluster analysis of the SDD patients. One group of eight SDD subjects performed normally on all tests of face perception and recognition. The other 16 subjects were impaired in recognition, though most were better than prosopagnosic patients. One impaired SDD subgroup had poor perception of facial structure but relatively preserved imagery, resembling prosopagnosic patients with medial occipitotemporal lesions. Another subgroup had better perception than imagery, resembling one prosopagnosic with bilateral anterior temporal lesions. Overall, SDD subgroup membership by face recognition did not correlate with a particular SDD diagnosis or subjective ratings of social impairment. We conclude that the social disturbance in SDD does not invariably lead to impaired face recognition. Abnormal face recognition in some SDD subjects is related to impaired perception of facial structure in a manner suggestive of occipitotemporal dysfunction. Heterogeneity in the perceptual processing of faces may imply pathogenetic heterogeneity, with important implications for genetic and rehabilitative studies of SDD.


Subject(s)
Child Development Disorders, Pervasive/psychology , Prosopagnosia/psychology , Recognition, Psychology , Social Perception , Adolescent , Adult , Asperger Syndrome/psychology , Autistic Disorder/psychology , Child , Cluster Analysis , Facial Expression , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Photic Stimulation/methods
16.
Neurology ; 61(2): 220-5, 2003 Jul 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12874402

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Face imagery can access facial memories without the use of perceptual stimuli. Current data on the relation of imagery to the perceptual function and neuroanatomy of prosopagnosic patients are mixed, and little is known about the type of facial information patients can access through imagery. OBJECTIVE: The authors wished to determine 1) which lesions abolished face imagery in prosopagnosia, 2) if deficits in perceiving facial structure were paralleled by similar deficits in imagery, and 3) if covert recognition of faces correlated with the degree of residual imagery for faces. METHODS: The authors tested nine prosopagnosic patients who had been tested previously for perception of facial configuration and covert recognition of famous faces. The authors constructed a battery of 37 questions that asked subjects to imagine the faces of two celebrities and to choose which one had a certain facial property. Half were questions about facial features and half were about overall facial shape. RESULTS: Imagery was abolished only by anterior temporal lesions. Imagery for facial shape but not features was degraded by lesions of the right hemisphere's fusiform face area, which severely impaired perception of facial configuration. Feature imagery was degraded only when there was associated left occipito-temporal damage. Covert recognition was found when either configural perception or imagery was severely damaged, but not when both were abnormal. In patients with impaired configural perception, covert recognition correlated with feature imagery, suggesting that feature-based processing may drive residual covert abilities in these patients. CONCLUSION: Although anterior temporal cortex may be the site of facial memory stores, these data also support hypotheses that perceptual areas like the fusiform face area have parallel contributions to mental imagery. The data on covert recognition are consistent with a view that it is the residue of a partially damaged face-recognition network. Covert recognition may reflect the degree of damage across components of a network rather than mark a specific form of prosopagnosia or a dissociated pathway.


Subject(s)
Face , Imagination/physiology , Pattern Recognition, Visual/physiology , Prosopagnosia/psychology , Age of Onset , Agnosia/etiology , Brain Injuries/complications , Brain Injuries/physiopathology , Color Vision Defects/etiology , Dominance, Cerebral , Hematoma, Subdural/complications , Hemianopsia/etiology , Humans , Infarction, Posterior Cerebral Artery/complications , Infarction, Posterior Cerebral Artery/physiopathology , Infarction, Posterior Cerebral Artery/psychology , Male , Mental Recall/physiology , Middle Aged , Occipital Lobe/physiopathology , Prosopagnosia/etiology , Prosopagnosia/physiopathology , Reaction Time , Temporal Lobe/physiopathology
17.
Neuropsychologia ; 41(4): 421-41, 2003.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12559160

ABSTRACT

There have been a number of reports of preserved face imagery in prosopagnosia. We put this issue to experimental test by comparing the performance of MJH, a 34-year-old prosopagnosic since the age of 5, to controls on tasks where the participants had to judge faces of current celebrities, either in terms of overall similarity (Of Bette Midler, Hillary Clinton, and Diane Sawyer, whose face looks least like the other two?) or on individual features (Is Ronald Reagan's nose pointy?). For each task, a performance measure reflecting the degree of agreement of each participant with the average of the others (not including MJH) was calculated. On the imagery versions of these tasks, MJH was within the lower range of the controls for the agreement measure (though significantly below the mean of the controls). When the same tasks were performed from pictures, agreement among the controls markedly increased whereas MJH's performance was virtually unaffected, placing him well below the range of the controls. This pattern was also apparent with a test of facial features of emotion (Are the eyes wrinkled when someone is surprised?). On three non-face imagery tasks assessing color (What color is a football?), relative lengths of animal's tails (Is a bear's tail long in proportion to its body?), and mental size comparisons (What is bigger, a camel or a zebra?), MJH was within or close to the lower end of the normal range. As most of the celebrities became famous after the onset of MJH's prosopagnosia, our confirmation of the reports of less impaired face imagery in some prosopagnosics cannot be attributed to pre-lesion storage. We speculate that face recognition, in contrast to object recognition, relies more heavily on a representation that describes the initial spatial filter values so the metrics of the facial surface can be specified. If prosopagnosia is regarded as a form of simultanagnosia in which some of these filter values cannot be registered on any one encounter with a face, then multiple opportunities for repeated storage may partially compensate for the degraded representation on that single encounter. Imagery may allow access to this more complete representation.


Subject(s)
Face , Imagination , Prosopagnosia/psychology , Visual Perception , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Reaction Time
18.
Bull Acad Natl Med ; 185(3): 537-49; discussion 550-3, 2001.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11501262

ABSTRACT

We report three observations of patients who suffered from impaired face recognition following cerebral lesions. Two had classical prosopagnosia, resulting from bilateral in one case and right unilateral occipito-temporal in the other. They could not differentiate famous face from unknown ones, and did not feel any familiarity. The third patient has a normal feeling of knowing, could distinguish between familiar and unfamiliar faces, but was unable to evoke any biographical information about the personalities. Prosopagnosic patients demonstrated, in an experimental condition of learning face-name pairs, implicit knowledge. We assume that these capacities were dependent of the activation of networks coding familiar faces in memory. Mental imagery of faces were normal in theses two cases. In addition, stimulation of mental imagery in the first patient improved implicit knowledge in forced choice tasks. These cases throws a light on the respective role of each hemisphere in face recognition. The right hemisphere is advantaged in perceptual analysis, and activates, from the perceived faces, mnestic systems which codes for previously encountered faces. It generates feeling of familiarity, probably by the way of specific systems which differs from, and completes, those allowing identification. The left hemisphere enable access to semantic-biographic knowledge in a conscious, verbal and explicit way.


Subject(s)
Cerebral Infarction/complications , Hematoma, Subdural/complications , Prosopagnosia/etiology , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Brain/physiology , Facial Expression , Female , Functional Laterality , Humans , Male , Neurologic Examination , Neuropsychological Tests , Prosopagnosia/classification , Prosopagnosia/diagnosis , Prosopagnosia/psychology , Visual Perception/physiology
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