Literature DB >> 21569784

What the study of voice recognition in normal subjects and brain-damaged patients tells us about models of familiar people recognition.

Guido Gainotti1.   

Abstract

In recent years it has been shown that a disorder in recognizing familiar people can be observed in patients with lesions affecting the anterior parts of the temporal lobes and that these disorders can be multi-modal, simultaneously affecting the visual, auditory and linguistic channels that allow person identification. Several authors have also shown that patients with right anterior temporal atrophy are more impaired in assessing familiarity and in retrieving person-specific semantic information from faces than from names, whereas the opposite pattern of performance can be observed in patients with left temporal lobe atrophy. Voice recognition disorders have been studied much less even despite their clinical and theoretical importance. The aim of the present review, therefore, was to compare recognition of familiar faces and voices, taking into account not only results obtained in individual patients with right anterior temporal lesions, but also those of group studies of unselected right- and left brain-damaged patients and results of experimental investigations conducted on face and voice recognition in normal subjects. Results of the review showed that: (1) voice recognition disorders are mainly due to right temporal lesions, similarly to face recognition disorders; (2) famous voice recognition disorders can be dissociated from unfamiliar voice discrimination impairments; (3) although face and voice recognition disorders tend to co-occur, they can also dissociate and in these patients there is a prevalent involvement of the right fusiform gyrus when face recognition disorders are on the foreground, and of the right superior temporal gyrus when voice recognition disorders are prominent; (4) normal subjects have greater difficulty evaluating familiarity and drawing semantic information from the voices than from the faces of celebrities. These data are at variance with models which assume that familiarity feelings may be generated at the level of person identity nodes (PINs) and that the latter may be considered as modality-free gateways to single semantic systems in which information about people is stored in an amodal format.
Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2011        PMID: 21569784     DOI: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2011.04.027

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuropsychologia        ISSN: 0028-3932            Impact factor:   3.139


  12 in total

1.  Crossmodal interactions in audiovisual emotion processing.

Authors:  Veronika I Müller; Edna C Cieslik; Bruce I Turetsky; Simon B Eickhoff
Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2011-12-13       Impact factor: 6.556

Review 2.  The Differential Contributions of Conceptual Representation Format and Language Structure to Levels of Semantic Abstraction Capacity.

Authors:  Guido Gainotti
Journal:  Neuropsychol Rev       Date:  2017-04-03       Impact factor: 7.444

3.  Famous people recognition through personal name: a normative study.

Authors:  Chiara Piccininni; Davide Quaranta; Costanza Papagno; Luigi Trojano; Antonia Ferrara; Simona Luzzi; Giovanni Augusto Carlesimo; Camillo Marra; Guido Gainotti
Journal:  Neurol Sci       Date:  2018-01-30       Impact factor: 3.307

Review 4.  Recognition disorders for famous faces and voices: a review of the literature and normative data of a new test battery.

Authors:  Davide Quaranta; Chiara Piccininni; Giovanni Augusto Carlesimo; Simona Luzzi; Camillo Marra; Costanza Papagno; Luigi Trojano; Guido Gainotti
Journal:  Neurol Sci       Date:  2015-12-23       Impact factor: 3.307

5.  Musicians show general enhancement of complex sound encoding and better inhibition of irrelevant auditory change in music: an ERP study.

Authors:  Natalya Kaganovich; Jihyun Kim; Caryn Herring; Jennifer Schumaker; Megan Macpherson; Christine Weber-Fox
Journal:  Eur J Neurosci       Date:  2013-01-10       Impact factor: 3.386

Review 6.  Is the right anterior temporal variant of prosopagnosia a form of 'associative prosopagnosia' or a form of 'multimodal person recognition disorder'?

Authors:  Guido Gainotti
Journal:  Neuropsychol Rev       Date:  2013-04-12       Impact factor: 7.444

7.  The left temporal pole is a heteromodal hub for retrieving proper names.

Authors:  Eric J Waldron; Kenneth Manzel; Daniel Tranel
Journal:  Front Biosci (Schol Ed)       Date:  2014-01-01

8.  The temporal lobes differentiate between the voices of famous and unknown people: an event-related fMRI study on speaker recognition.

Authors:  Anja Bethmann; Henning Scheich; André Brechmann
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-10-24       Impact factor: 3.240

9.  Voices to reckon with: perceptions of voice identity in clinical and non-clinical voice hearers.

Authors:  Johanna C Badcock; Saruchi Chhabra
Journal:  Front Hum Neurosci       Date:  2013-04-03       Impact factor: 3.169

10.  Temporal voice areas exist in autism spectrum disorder but are dysfunctional for voice identity recognition.

Authors:  Stefanie Schelinski; Kamila Borowiak; Katharina von Kriegstein
Journal:  Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci       Date:  2016-06-30       Impact factor: 3.436

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.