Abstract

Cognitive models propose that face recognition is accomplished through a series of discrete stages, including perceptual representation of facial structure, and encoding and retrieval of facial information. This implies that impaired face recognition can result from failures of face perception, face memory, or both. Studies of acquired prosopagnosia, autism spectrum disorders, and the development of normal face recognition support the idea that face perception and face memory are distinct processes, yet this distinction has received little attention in developmental prosopagnosia (DP). To address this issue, we tested the face perception and face memory of children and adults with DP. By definition, face memory is impaired in DP, so memory deficits were present in all participants. However, we found that all children, but only half of the adults had impaired face perception. Thus, results from adults indicate that face perception and face memory are dissociable, while the results from children provide no evidence for this division. Importantly, our findings raise the possibility that DP is qualitatively different in childhood versus adulthood. We discuss theoretical explanations for this developmental pattern and conclude that longitudinal studies are necessary to better understand the developmental trajectory of face perception and face memory deficits in DP.

Highlights

  • Prosopagnosia is a neurocognitive disorder characterized by severely impaired face recognition (Bodamer, 1947)

  • This was in line with results from the modified t-tests, which identified four of five children as scoring significantly below the control mean on the face memory tests, and all five children as scoring significantly below the control mean on the face perception test

  • We feel especially confident that these six developmental prosopagnosia (DP) have normal facial identity perception because the performance of the control group was good on this task compared to a previously reported control group: the mean for the control group used here was 79.2% (SD = 8.5) whereas the mean for the control group in Duchaine et al (2007a) was 74.5% (SD = 8.5)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Prosopagnosia is a neurocognitive disorder characterized by severely impaired face recognition (Bodamer, 1947). Response times are not always provided, leaving the possibility that what appears to be normal performance may instead be the application of successful, but abnormal, feature matching strategies (Busigny et al, 2014; Duchaine and Nakayama, 2004; Farah, 2004; Newcombe, 1979). In support of this suggestion, the reports that did include reaction time (i.e. Behrmann et al, 2005; Humphreys et al, 2007) indicate that the DPs were significantly slower at the perceptual tasks than controls

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call