Abstract
Developmental prosopagnosia (DP) is a condition characterised by lifelong face recognition difficulties. Recent neuroimaging findings suggest that DP may be associated with aberrant structure and function in multimodal regions of cortex implicated in the processing of both facial and vocal identity. These findings suggest that both facial and vocal recognition may be impaired in DP. To test this possibility, we compared the performance of 22 DPs and a group of typical controls, on closely matched tasks that assessed famous face and famous voice recognition ability. As expected, the DPs showed severe impairment on the face recognition task, relative to typical controls. In contrast, however, the DPs and controls identified a similar number of voices. Despite evidence of interactions between facial and vocal processing, these findings suggest some degree of dissociation between the two processing pathways, whereby one can be impaired while the other develops typically. A possible explanation for this dissociation in DP could be that the deficit originates in the early perceptual encoding of face structure, rather than at later, post-perceptual stages of face identity processing, which may be more likely to involve interactions with other modalities.
Highlights
Developmental prosopagnosia (DP) is a condition characterised by lifelong face recognition difficulties
One trial in the face task was discarded from one DP participant because they reported that the image failed to appear on the screen
Mean voice recognition performance was highly similar in DPs (M = 59.46%, SD = 15.61) and controls (M = 60.74%, SD = 19.52) [t(64) = 0.267, p = 0.791, d = 0.069, CI95% = − 0.443, 0.581], suggesting that DPs show comparable famous voice recognition ability to typical controls (Fig. 1a,b)
Summary
Developmental prosopagnosia (DP) is a condition characterised by lifelong face recognition difficulties. Recent neuroimaging findings suggest that DP may be associated with aberrant structure and function in multimodal regions of cortex implicated in the processing of both facial and vocal identity. These findings suggest that both facial and vocal recognition may be impaired in DP. To test this possibility, we compared the performance of 22 DPs and a group of typical controls, on closely matched tasks that assessed famous face and famous voice recognition ability. Co-occurring face and voice recognition deficits are often associated with damage to multimodal regions, notably the anterior temporal lobe (ATL)[37,47]. These findings lend support to the view that these multimodal regions make a causal contribution to both face and voice recognition
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