keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37740564/are-people-with-autism-prosopagnosic
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Todd Kamensek, Tirta Susilo, Grace Iarocci, Ipek Oruc
Difficulties in various face processing tasks have been well documented in autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Several meta-analyses and numerous case-control studies have indicated that this population experiences a moderate degree of impairment, with a small percentage of studies failing to detect any impairment. One possible account of this mixed pattern of findings is heterogeneity in face processing abilities stemming from the presence of a subpopulation of prosopagnosic individuals with ASD alongside those with normal face processing skills...
September 23, 2023: Autism Research: Official Journal of the International Society for Autism Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37622816/face-blindness-in-children-and-current-interventions
#22
REVIEW
Weina Ma, Zeyu Xiao, Yannan Wu, Xiaoxian Zhang, Dongwen Zheng, Xue Lei, Chengyang Han
Children with prosopagnosia, also known as face blindness, struggle to recognize the faces of acquaintances, which can have a negative impact on their social interactions and overall functioning. This paper reviews existing research on interventions for children with prosopagnosia, including compensatory and remedial strategies, and provides a summary and comparison of their effectiveness. However, despite the availability of these interventions, their effectiveness remains limited and constrained by various factors...
August 11, 2023: Behavioral Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37612792/-looking-at-nothing-an-implicit-ocular-motor-index-of-face-recognition-in-developmental-prosopagnosia
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Aida Rahavi, Manuela Malaspina, Andrea Albonico, Jason J S Barton
ABSTRACT Subjects often look towards to previous location of a stimulus related to a task even when that stimulus is no longer visible. In this study we asked whether this effect would be preserved or reduced in subjects with developmental prosopagnosia. Participants learned faces presented in video-clips and then saw a brief montage of four faces, which was replaced by a screen with empty boxes, at which time they indicated whether the learned face had been present in the montage. Control subjects were more likely to look at the blank location where the learned face had appeared, on both hit and miss trials, though the effect was larger on hit trials...
August 23, 2023: Cognitive Neuropsychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37602741/alcohol-use-predicts-face-perception-impairments-and-difficulties-in-face-recognition
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Denise Dal Lago, Edwin Burns, Elizabeth Gaunt, Emma Peers, Robin C Jackson, Thomas D W Wilcockson
Background : Risky alcohol use is related to a variety of cognitive impairments, including memory and visuo-perceptual difficulties. Remarkably, no prior work has assessed whether usage of alcohol can predict difficulties perceiving facial identity. Objectives : Therefore, this study aimed to investigate whether riskier alcohol consumption predicted impairments in face perception and self-reported difficulties in face recognition. Results : Participants ( N  = 239, male = 77) were over 18 years old and had normal or corrected-to-normal vision...
August 21, 2023: Substance Use & Misuse
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37597266/the-role-of-visual-imagery-in-face-recognition-and-the-construction-of-facial-composites-evidence-from-aphantasia
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Carla J Dance, Graham Hole, Julia Simner
People with aphantasia have a markedly impaired ability to form visual images in the mind's eye. Here, by testing people with and without aphantasia, we examine the relationship between visual imagery and face processing. We show that aphantasics have weaker face recognition than people with visual imagery, using both self-report (Prosopagnosia Index) and behavioural measures (Cambridge Face Memory Test). However, aphantasics nonetheless have a fully intact ability to construct facial composites from memory (i...
July 22, 2023: Cortex; a Journal Devoted to the Study of the Nervous System and Behavior
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37545244/is-shadowing-behavior-caused-by-body-representation-disorders-and-apraxia
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Josselin Baumard
Shadowing is a person-following behavior, commonly observed in dementia (e.g., Alzheimer's disease). It may be caused by neuropsychological impairments associated with posterior brain lesions, as Kudo et al. described it in a patient with posterior cortical atrophy and no frontal signs. These authors have suggested that shadowing may arise from the combination of visuospatial impairments, aphasia, apraxia, and prosopagnosia. However, how these symptoms may contribute to shadowing remains unclear. It is suggested that the combination of visuospatial impairments, body representation disorders, and apraxia, may result in complete loss of spatial representations and hence, shadowing behavior...
August 1, 2023: Journal of Alzheimer's Disease: JAD
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37497923/acute-headache-aphasia-and-prosopagnosia-case-report-in-a-young-adult
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Samantha Neumeier, Elizabeth Morrison, Kelly Sandberg, Kallol K Set
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
July 27, 2023: Clinical Pediatrics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37483961/why-can-people-with-developmental-prosopagnosia-recognise-some-familiar-faces-insights-from-subjective-experience
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Emma Portch, Liam Wignall, Sarah Bate
Developmental prosopagnosia is a relatively common visuo-cognitive condition, characterised by impaired facial identity recognition. Impairment severity appears to reside on a continuum, however, it is unknown whether instances of milder deficits reflect the successful use of spontaneous (typical) face recognition strategies, or the application of extraneous compensatory cues to recognition. Here, we explore this issue in two studies. First, 23 adults with developmental prosopagnosia were asked about their use of spontaneous versus compensatory face recognition techniques in everyday life, using a series of closed- and open-ended questions...
2023: PeerJ
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37394678/repurposing-artificial-intelligence-tools-for-disease-modeling-case-study-of-face-recognition-deficits-in-neurodegenerative-diseases
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gargi Singh, Murali Ramanathan
Face recognition deficits occur in diseases such as prosopagnosia, autism, Alzheimer's disease, and dementias. The objective was to evaluate whether degrading the architecture of artificial intelligence (AI) face recognition algorithms can model deficits in diseases. Two established face recognition models, convolutional-classification neural network (C-CNN) and Siamese network (SN), were trained on the FEI faces dataset (~14 images/person for 200 persons). The trained networks were perturbed by reducing weights (weakening) and node count (lesioning) to emulate brain tissue dysfunction and lesions, respectively...
July 2, 2023: Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37390594/using-representational-similarity-analysis-to-reveal-category-and-process-specificity-in-visual-object-recognition
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Bahareh Jozranjbar, Árni Kristjánsson, Randi Starrfelt, Christian Gerlach, Heida Maria Sigurdardottir
Cross-condition comparisons on neurodevelopmental conditions are central in neurodiversity research. In the realm of visual perception, the performance of participants with different category-specific disorders such as developmental prosopagnosia (problems with faces) and dyslexia (problems with words) have contributed to understanding of perceptual processes involved in word and face recognition. Alterations in face and word recognition are present in several neurodiverse populations, and improved knowledge about their relationship may increase our understanding of this variability of impairment...
June 7, 2023: Cortex; a Journal Devoted to the Study of the Nervous System and Behavior
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37321679/no-increased-prevalence-of-prosopagnosia-in-aphantasia-visual-recognition-deficits-are-small-and-not-restricted-to-faces
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Merlin Monzel, Annabel Vetterlein, Svea A Hogeterp, Martin Reuter
Aphantasia and prosopagnosia are both rare conditions with impairments in visual cognition. While prosopagnosia refers to a face recognition deficit, aphantasics exhibit a lack of mental imagery. Current object recognition theories propose an interplay of perception and mental representations, making an association between recognition performance and visual imagery plausible. While the literature assumes a link between aphantasia and prosopagnosia, other impairments in aphantasia have been shown to be rather global...
June 15, 2023: Perception
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37216847/dissociations-between-face-identity-and-face-expression-processing-in-developmental-prosopagnosia
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lauren Bell, Brad Duchaine, Tirta Susilo
Individuals with developmental prosopagnosia (DPs) experience severe and lifelong deficits recognising faces, but whether their deficits are selective to the processing of face identity or extend to the processing of face expression remains unclear. Clarifying this issue is important for understanding DP impairments and advancing theories of face processing. We compared identity and expression processing in a large sample of DPs (N = 124) using three different matching tasks that each assessed identity and expression processing with identical experimental formats...
May 20, 2023: Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37156079/recognition-of-animal-faces-is-impaired-in-developmental-prosopagnosia
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gabriela Epihova, Richard Cook, Timothy J Andrews
An on-going debate in psychology and neuroscience concerns the way faces and objects are represented. Domain-specific theories suggest that faces are processed via a specialised mechanism, separate from objects. Developmental prosopagnosia (DP) is a neurodevelopmental disorder in which there is a deficit in the ability to recognize conspecific (human) faces. It is unclear, however, whether prosopagnosia also affects recognition of heterospecific (animal) faces. To address this question, we compared recognition performance with human and animal faces in neurotypical controls and participants with DP...
May 6, 2023: Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37052500/contralateral-biases-in-category-selective-areas-are-stronger-in-the-left-hemisphere-than-the-right-hemisphere
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sarah B Herald, Hua Yang, Brad Duchaine
Contralateral bias is a well-known feature of early visual cortex, but how it varies across higher-level, category-selective visual cortex and how much that bias differs between preferred and nonpreferred is unclear. Here, we examined 12 category-selective regions across 4 experiments using peripherally presented faces, bodies, houses, and scenes, to measure the difference in contralateral bias between preferred and nonpreferred stimuli. The results showed a substantial range of contralateral biases across the category-selective regions, similar to prior studies using category-selective stimuli [Silson, E...
April 10, 2023: Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36971958/a-new-asian-version-of-the-cfmt-the-cambridge-face-memory-test-chinese-malaysian-cfmt-my
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Siew Kei Kho, Bryan Qi Zheng Leong, David R T Keeble, Hoo Keat Wong, Alejandro J Estudillo
The Cambridge Face Memory Test (CFMT) is one of the most important measures of individual differences in face recognition and for the diagnosis of prosopagnosia. Having two different CFMT versions using a different set of faces seems to improve the reliability of the evaluation. However, at the present time, there is only one Asian version of the test. In this study, we present the Cambridge Face Memory Test - Chinese Malaysian (CFMT-MY), a novel Asian CFMT using Chinese Malaysian faces. In Experiment 1, Chinese Malaysian participants (N = 134) completed two versions of the Asian CFMT and one object recognition test...
March 27, 2023: Behavior Research Methods
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36966620/persistent-prosopagnosia-following-covid-19
#36
Marie-Luise Kieseler, Brad Duchaine
COVID-19 can cause psychological problems including loss of smell and taste, long-lasting memory, speech, and language impairments, and psychosis. Here, we provide the first report of prosopagnosia following symptoms consistent with COVID-19. Annie is a 28-year-old woman who had normal face recognition prior to contracting COVID-19 in March 2020. Two months later, she noticed face recognition difficulties while experiencing symptom relapses and her deficits with faces have persisted. On two tests of familiar face recognition and two tests of unfamiliar face recognition, Annie showed clear impairments...
March 9, 2023: Cortex; a Journal Devoted to the Study of the Nervous System and Behavior
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36938522/systematic-evaluation-of-high-level-visual-deficits-and-lesions-in-posterior-cerebral-artery-stroke
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ro Julia Robotham, Grace E Rice, Alex P Leff, Matthew A Lambon Ralph, Randi Starrfelt
Knowledge about the consequences of stroke on high-level vision comes primarily from single case studies of patients selected based on their behavioural profiles, typically patients with specific stroke syndromes like pure alexia or prosopagnosia. There are, however, no systematic, detailed, large-scale evaluations of the more typical clinical behavioural and lesion profiles of impairments in high-level vision after posterior cerebral artery stroke. We present behavioural and lesion data from the Back of the Brain project, to date the largest ( N = 64) and most detailed examination of patients with cortical posterior cerebral artery strokes selected based on lesion location...
2023: Brain communications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36915548/self-reported-face-recognition-abilities-moderately-predict-face-learning-skills-evidence-from-italian-samples
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Serena Tagliente, Marcello Passarelli, Vitiana D'Elia, Annalisa Palmisano, James D Dunn, Michele Masini, Tiziana Lanciano, Antonietta Curci, Davide Rivolta
Face Recognition Ability (FRA) varies widely throughout the population. Previous research highlights a positive relationship between self-perceived and objectively measured FRA in the healthy population, suggesting that people do have insight into their FRA. Given that this relationship has not been investigated in Italian samples yet, the main aim of the present work was to develop an Italian translation of the Prosopagnosia Index-20 (PI-20), a self-report measure of FRA, to investigate the relationship between PI-20 performances and an objective assessment given by the Cambridge Face Memory Test Long Form (CFMT+) in the Italian population...
March 2023: Heliyon
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36913989/music-perception-in-acquired-prosopagnosia
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jason Js Barton, Jacob L Stubbs, Sebastien Paquette, Brad Duchaine, Gottfried Schlaug, Sherryse L Corrow
BACKGROUND: Acquired prosopagnosia is often associated with other deficits such as dyschromatopsia and topographagnosia, from damage to adjacent perceptual networks. A recent study showed that some subjects with developmental prosopagnosia also have congenital amusia, but problems with music perception have not been described with the acquired variant. OBJECTIVE: Our goal was to determine if music perception was also impaired in subjects with acquired prosopagnosia, and if so, its anatomic correlate...
May 3, 2023: Neuropsychologia
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36905701/what-is-the-prevalence-of-developmental-prosopagnosia-an-empirical-assessment-of-different-diagnostic-cutoffs
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Joseph DeGutis, Kanisha Bahierathan, Katherine Barahona, EunMyoung Lee, Travis C Evans, Hye Min Shin, Maruti Mishra, Jirapat Likitlersuang, Jeremy B Wilmer
The prevalence of developmental prosopagnosia (DP), lifelong face recognition deficits, is widely reported to be 2-2.5%. However, DP has been diagnosed in different ways across studies, resulting in differing prevalence rates. In the current investigation, we estimated the range of DP prevalence by administering well-validated objective and subjective face recognition measures to an unselected web-based sample of 3116 18-55 year-olds and applying DP diagnostic cutoffs from the last 14 years. We found estimated prevalence rates ranged from ...
February 4, 2023: Cortex; a Journal Devoted to the Study of the Nervous System and Behavior
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