Covert Face Recognition in Prosopagnosia: A Dissociable Function?
1995; Elsevier BV; Volume: 31; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1016/s0010-9452(13)80063-9
ISSN1973-8102
AutoresStefan R. Schweinberger, Thomas Klos, Werner Sommer,
Tópico(s)Psychology of Moral and Emotional Judgment
ResumoCovert face recognition was investigated in a patient with prosopagnosia without object agnosia. This patient performed well in various face processing tasks like expression analysis and feature processing and had relatively preserved semantic knowledge about persons, but was slightly impaired in the visual matching of unfamiliar faces. In a face-name pairedassociate relearning task, covert face recognition was demonstrated to be above-chance. However, as this task cannot be meaningfully applied to control subjects, results do not necessarily indicate that the degree of covert face recognition is normal. In fact, in contrast to control subjects, the patient showed significantly reduced associative priming of names by face primes as compared to name primes, suggesting a quantitative reduction of covert face recognition. It is argued that these results support the view that overt and covert face recognition are brought about by the same functional system (Farah, O'Reilly and Vecera, 1993).
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