Title of article
What aspects of face processing are impaired in developmental prosopagnosia?
Author/Authors
Le Grand، نويسنده , , Richard and Cooper، نويسنده , , Philip A. and Mondloch، نويسنده , , Catherine J. and Lewis، نويسنده , , Terri L. and Sagiv، نويسنده , , Noam and de Gelder، نويسنده , , Beatrice and Maurer، نويسنده , , Daphne، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
20
From page
139
To page
158
Abstract
Developmental prosopagnosia (DP) is a severe impairment in identifying faces that is present from early in life and that occurs despite no apparent brain damage and intact visual and intellectual function. Here, we investigated what aspects of face processing are impaired/spared in developmental prosopagnosia by examining a relatively large group of individuals with DP (n = 8) using an extensive battery of well-established tasks. The tasks included measures of sensitivity to global motion and to global form, detection that a stimulus is a face, determination of its sex, holistic face processing, processing of face identity based on features, contour, and the spacing of features, and judgments of attractiveness. The DP cases showed normal sensitivity to global motion and global form and performed normally on our tests of face detection and holistic processing. On the other tasks, many DP cases were impaired but there was no systematic pattern. At least half showed deficits in processing of facial identity based on either the outer contour or spacing of the internal features, and/or on judgments of attractiveness. Three of the eight were impaired in processing facial identify based on the shape of internal features. The results show that DP is a heterogeneous condition and that impairment in recognizing faces cannot be predicted by poor performance on any one measure of face processing.
Keywords
Prosopagnosia , Face processing , Global motion , Global form , Face detection , Holistic processing , Featural processing , Configural processing , attractiveness
Journal title
Brain and Cognition
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
Brain and Cognition
Record number
2249265
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