Prosopagnosia
Cognitive evidence for a specialist face processing module (system)
Visual Illusions with Faces
Face inversion effect
Patient (cognitive) evidence for specialist face processing system
Farah (1990), Acquired alexia
Neural evidence for specialist face processing system
Neural evidence for specialist face processing system - single cell recordings in primates
Stimuli presented: monkey faces, human faces, stimuli with face features/characteristics
Found cells that selectively responded to
-> frontal monkey profile
-> others all facial stimuli
But cannot conclude cells purely for face processing
Infant development of facial discernment
Normal infants
Evidence for genetic basis for prosopagnosia
Developmental prosopagnosia – includes individuals with congenital prosopagnosia and individuals who have sustained brain damage either before birth or in early childhood
Congenital prosopagnosia - impairment in face processing that is present from birth, in absence of brain damage; normal intellect and sensory processes
One idea - Developmental Prosopagnosia is caused by a generalised deficit in configural processing
Evidence suggests that Developmental (Congenital) Prosopagnosia runs in families
Bruce and Young (1986) model of face recognition
Structural encoding stage - Bruce and Young (1986) model of face recognition
Bruce and Young 1986 model of face recognition - analysis and processing stages
Expression Analysis – determine facial expression independent of face
Facial Speech Analysis – information from lip and tongue movements of speaker
Directed Visual Processing – attention to face characteristics, learning new faces
Face recognition units - Bruce and Young 1986 model of face recognition
Nodes and name - Bruce and Young 1986 model of face recognition
Person Identity Nodes
Post FRU activation, then semantic (bibliographic) information about the person is activated (e.g., occupation, person characteristics etc.).
Name Generation Stage
Activation of the PIN and subsequently semantic information allows you to be able to name the face
Cognitive system - Bruce and Young 1986 model of face recognition
Prosopagnosia and the Bruce and Young 1986 model of face recognition
Prosopagnosia Types - two distinct groups
Impaired ability to perceive faces
-> Defect affects Structural Encoding – model
Impaired face recognition
Burton, Bruce and Johnston (1990) face recognition model
Haxby et al (2000) model of face recognition
*look up image
Evidence of face recognition without awareness
Covert face recognition physiological evidence
Covert face recognition behavioural evidence
De Haan et al. (1987a) Patient PH
Face matching task - Patient PH - covert face recognition behavioural evidence
Face Matching Task – are 2 simultaneously presented faces the same person?
Interference experiment - Patient PH - covert face recognition behavioural evidence
Interference Experiment/Task – faces are shown with a printed name
Associative priming task - Patient PH - covert face recognition behavioural evidence
Anomia - people’s names