Abstract

Developmental prosopagnosia (DP) is a neurodevelopmental condition characterised by difficulties recognising and discriminating faces. It is currently unclear whether the perceptual impairments seen in DP are restricted to identity information, or also affect the perception of other facial characteristics. To address this question, we compared the performance of 17 DPs and matched controls on two sensitive sex categorisation tasks. First, in a morph categorisation task, participants made binary decisions about faces drawn from a morph continuum that blended incrementally an average male face and an average female face. We found that judgement precision was significantly lower in the DPs than in the typical controls. Second, we used a sex discrimination task, where female or male facial identities were blended with an androgynous average face. We manipulated the relative weighting of each facial identity and the androgynous average to create four levels of signal strength. We found that DPs were significantly less sensitive than controls at each level of difficulty. Together, these results suggest that the visual processing difficulties in DP extend beyond the extraction of facial identity and affects the extraction of other facial characteristics. Deficits of facial sex categorisation accord with an apperceptive characterisation of DP.

Highlights

  • Developmental prosopagnosia (DP) is a neurodevelopmental condition characterised by difficulties recognising and discriminating faces

  • We found that DPs were i) less precise in their categorisations of facial sex, and ii) less sensitive to the sex signal presented in faces at all levels of task difficulty

  • There was a significant difference between slope estimates for DPs (M = 5.86, SD = 2.86) and typically developed (TD) (M = 7.97, SD = 3.14) [t(35) = 2.116, p = 0.042], indicating that at the group level, the DPs were less sensitive to subtle differences in facial sex than TD controls

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Summary

Introduction

Developmental prosopagnosia (DP) is a neurodevelopmental condition characterised by difficulties recognising and discriminating faces It is currently unclear whether the perceptual impairments seen in DP are restricted to identity information, or affect the perception of other facial characteristics. To address this question, we compared the performance of 17 DPs and matched controls on two sensitive sex categorisation tasks. Other researchers favour an apperceptive account – that DP is an impairment of early structural face-encoding[1,3,21,22] Consistent with this view, the relative size of face matching deficits seen in DP do not vary as a function of retention interval[23,24] and many DPs struggle to sort unfamiliar faces presented simultaneously[4,23].

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