Literature DB >> 29845731

Damasio's error - Prosopagnosia with intact within-category object recognition.

Bruno Rossion1,2,3.   

Abstract

The sudden inability to recognize individual faces following brain damage was first reported in a scientific journal 150 years ago and termed 'prosopagnosia' 70 years ago. While the term originally identified a face-selective neurological condition, it is now obscured by a sequence of imprecisions. First, prosopagnosia is routinely used to define symptoms of individual face recognition (IFR) difficulties in the context of visual object agnosia or other neurological conditions, or even in the normal population. Second, this over-expansive definition has lent support to a long-standing within-category recognition account of prosopagnosia, that is, that the impairment of IFR reflects a general impairment in recognizing within-category objects. However, stringent experimental studies of classical cases of prosopagnosia following brain damage show that their core impairment is not in recognizing physically similar exemplars within non-face object categories. Instead, the impairment presents specifically for recognizing exemplars of the category of faces. Moreover, compared to typical observers, the impairment appears even more severe for recognizing individual faces against physically dissimilar than similar distractors. Here, I argue that we need to limit accordingly our definition of prosopagnosia to a clinical (i.e., neurological) condition in which there is no basic-level object recognition impairment. Other criteria for prosopagnosia are proposed, with the hope that this conservative definition enables the study of human IFR processes in isolation, and supports progress in understanding the nature of these processes.
© 2018 The British Psychological Society.

Entities:  

Keywords:  category specificity; expertise; individual face recognition; prosopagnosia; visual agnosia

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29845731     DOI: 10.1111/jnp.12162

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neuropsychol        ISSN: 1748-6645            Impact factor:   2.864


  3 in total

Review 1.  Is human face recognition lateralized to the right hemisphere due to neural competition with left-lateralized visual word recognition? A critical review.

Authors:  Bruno Rossion; Aliette Lochy
Journal:  Brain Struct Funct       Date:  2021-11-03       Impact factor: 3.270

2.  Associations between self-reported and objective face recognition abilities are only evident in above- and below-average recognisers.

Authors:  Alejandro J Estudillo; Hoo Keat Wong
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2021-01-11       Impact factor: 2.984

3.  Category-selective deficits are the exception and not the rule: Evidence from a case-series of 64 patients with ventral occipito-temporal cortex damage.

Authors:  Grace E Rice; Sheila J Kerry; Ro J Robotham; Alex P Leff; Matthew A Lambon Ralph; Randi Starrfelt
Journal:  Cortex       Date:  2021-02-19       Impact factor: 4.644

  3 in total

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