Reduced fixation on the upper area of personally familiar faces following acquired prosopagnosia.

Détails

ID Serval
serval:BIB_8F5FE1FEAE2C
Type
Article: article d'un périodique ou d'un magazine.
Collection
Publications
Titre
Reduced fixation on the upper area of personally familiar faces following acquired prosopagnosia.
Périodique
Journal of neuropsychology
Auteur⸱e⸱s
Orban de Xivry J.J., Ramon M., Lefèvre P., Rossion B.
ISSN
1748-6645 (Print)
ISSN-L
1748-6645
Statut éditorial
Publié
Date de publication
03/2008
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
2
Numéro
1
Pages
245-268
Langue
anglais
Notes
Publication types: Case Reports ; Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Publication Status: ppublish
Résumé
Selective impairment of face recognition following brain damage, as in acquired prosopagnosia, may cause a dramatic loss of diagnosticity of the eye area of the face and an increased reliance on the mouth for identification (Caldara et al., 2005). To clarify the nature of this phenomenon, we measured eye fixation patterns in a case of pure prosopagnosia (PS, Rossion et al., 2003) during her identification of photographs of personally familiar faces (27 children of her kindergarten). Her age-matched colleague served as a control. Consistent with previous evidence, the normal control identified the faces within two fixations located just below the eyes (central upper nose). This pattern (location and duration) of fixations remained unchanged even by increasing difficulty by presenting anti-caricatures of the faces. In contrast, the great majority of the patient's fixations, irrespective of her accuracy, were located on the mouth. Overall, these observations confirm the abnormally reduced processing of the upper area of the face in acquired prosopagnosia. Most importantly, the prosopagnosic patient also fixated the area of the eyes spontaneously in between the first and last fixation, ruling out alternative accounts of her behaviour such as, for example, avoidance or failure to orient attention to the eyes, as observed in autistic or bilateral amygdala patients. Rather, they reinforce our proposal of a high-level perceptual account (Caldara et al., 2005), according to which acquired prosopagnosic patients have lost the ability to represent multiple elements of an individual face as a perceptual unit (holistic face perception). To identify a given face, they focus very precisely on local features rather than seeing the whole of a face from its diagnostic centre (i.e., just below the eyes). The upper area of the face is particularly less attended to and less relevant for the prosopagnosic patient because it contains multiple features that require normal holistic perception in order to be the most diagnostic region. Consequently, prosopagnosic patients develop a more robust representation of the mouth, a relatively isolated feature in the face that may contain more information than any single element of the upper face area, and is thus sampled repeatedly for resolving ambiguity in the process of identification.
Mots-clé
Child, Eye Movements/physiology, Face, Female, Fixation, Ocular/physiology, Head Injuries, Closed/psychology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Photic Stimulation, Prosopagnosia/psychology, Psychomotor Performance/physiology, Reaction Time/physiology, Recognition, Psychology/physiology
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Oui
Création de la notice
29/03/2022 17:14
Dernière modification de la notice
29/03/2022 17:36
Données d'usage