| Literature DB >> 25324755 |
Tina T Liu1, Marlene Behrmann1.
Abstract
Congenital prosopagnosia (CP) refers to a lifelong impairment in face processing despite normal visual and intellectual skills. Many studies have suggested that the key underlying deficit in CP is one of a failure to engage holistic processing. Moreover, there has been some suggestion that, in normal observers, there may be greater involvement of the right than left hemisphere in holistic processing. To examine the proposed deficit in holistic processing and its potential hemispheric atypicality in CP, we compared the performance of 8 CP individuals with both matched controls and a large group of non-matched controls on a novel, vertical composite task. In this task, participants judged whether a cued half of a face (either left or right half) was the same or different at study and test, and the two face halves could be either aligned or misaligned. The standard index of holistic processing is one in which the unattended face half influences performance on the cued half and this influence is greater in the aligned than in the misaligned condition. Relative to controls, the CP participants, both at a group and at an individual level, did not show holistic processing in the vertical composite task. There was also no difference in performance as a function of hemifield of the cued face half in the CP individuals, and this was true in the control participants, as well. The findings clearly confirm the deficit in holistic processing in CP and reveal the useful application of this novel experimental paradigm to this population and potentially to others as well.Entities:
Keywords: chimeric face; composite face effect; congenital prosopagnosia; face lateralization; holistic processing
Year: 2014 PMID: 25324755 PMCID: PMC4179530 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2014.00750
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Figure 1Schematic diagram depicting the left-right composite paradigm. In this example, the cued part is on the left (with a green/shaded background) and the irrelevant part is on the right (with a white background). The format of the study and test faces can be either both aligned or both misaligned. Participants are instructed to make a same/different judgment based on the cued part in the study face and the test face, and to ignore the other irrelevant part. In congruent trials, the study and test face halves can both be the same (AB→AB) or different (AB→DC). In incongruent trials, a change can occur either in the irrelevant part (AB→AC) or in the cued part (AB→DB).
Biographic details and results (raw values and .
Color code: z-scores that exceed 2 SDs are denoted in red italics and z-scores that are between 1 and 2 SDs are denoted in blue italics.
*Calculation of CFMT Upright z-score is based on the 20 control data provided in Duchaine et al. (2007a,b), M = 59.6 (out of 72 responses), SD = 7.6.
**Calculation of CFMT Inverted z-score is based on the 20 control data provided in Duchaine and Nakayama (2006), M = 42.05 (out of72 responses), SD = 4.71.
***Calculation of Famous face questionnaire z-score is based on the control data reported in Avidan et al. (2011), M = 84.1 (%correct), SD = 13.2.
Figure 2Two sample trials of the vertical composite task. As depicted here, a trial proceeds from fixation (left of image) to response (right of image). Participants were shown a composite face (study), which was masked, and were required to indicate whether the cued part in the subsequent test face was the same or different as the same half (left or right) in the study face. Top: a cue-left aligned incongruent trial. Bottom: a cue-right misaligned congruent trial.
Figure 3Mean performance ( Note that although the schematic display shows the example of cueing the face half in the left visual field, the data were collapsed across visual fields. Error bars show ±1 standard error of the mean (**p < 0.01).
Crawford's .
Color code: Crawford's t-scores (negative only) with p values < 0.05 (two-tailed) are denoted in red italics and those with p values < 0.05 (one-tailed) are denoted in blue italics.
*Holistic processing index is calculated as aligned (congruent–incongruent) d′–misaligned (congruent–incongruent) d′.
Figure 4Performance (.