1. Holistic perception of the individual face is specific and necessary: Evidence from an extensive case study of acquired prosopagnosia
- Author
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Bruno Rossion, Olivier Felician, Mathieu Ceccaldi, Sven Joubert, and Thomas Busigny
- Subjects
Male ,genetic structures ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Neuropsychological Tests ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Developmental psychology ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Discrimination, Psychological ,Imaging, Three-Dimensional ,Perception ,Reaction Time ,Humans ,Aged ,Visual agnosia ,media_common ,Cognitive neuroscience of visual object recognition ,Information processing ,Recognition, Psychology ,Cognition ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Prosopagnosia ,Pattern Recognition, Visual ,Case-Control Studies ,Face ,Face (geometry) ,Cerebral hemisphere ,Pattern recognition (psychology) ,Psychology ,Photic Stimulation ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
We present an extensive investigation (24 experiments) of a new case of prosopagnosia following right unilateral damage, GG, with the aim of addressing two classical issues: (1) Can a visual recognition impairment truly be specific to faces? (2) What is the nature of acquired prosopagnosia? We show that GG recognizes nonface objects perfectly and quickly, even when it requires fine-grained analysis to individualize these objects. He is also capable of perceiving objects and faces as integrated wholes, as indicated by normal Navon effect, 3D-figures perception and perception of Mooney and Arcimboldo face stimuli. However, the patient could not perceive individual faces holistically, showing no inversion, composite, or whole-part advantage effects for faces. We conclude that an occipito-temporal right hemisphere lesion may lead to a specific impairment of holistic perception of individual items, a function that appears critical for normal face recognition but not for object recognition.
- Published
- 2010
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