Search results for "Prosopagnosia"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Compensatory strategies in processing facial emotions: evidence from prosopagnosia.

2006

We report data on the processing of facial emotion in a prosopagnosic patient (H.J.A.). H.J.A. was relatively accurate at discriminating happy from angry upright faces, but he performed at chance when the faces were inverted. Furthermore, with upright faces there was no configural interference effect on emotion judgements, when face parts expressing different emotions were aligned to express a new emergent emotion. We propose that H.J.A.'s emotion judgements relied on local rather than on configural information, and this local information was disrupted by inversion. A compensatory strategy, based on processing local face parts, can be sufficient to process at least some facial emotions.

Aged 80 and overMaleFacial expressionChi-Square DistributionCognitive NeuroscienceEmotionsInformation processingExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyRecognition PsychologyFacial recognition systemFacial ExpressionBehavioral NeuroscienceProsopagnosiaExpression (architecture)Pattern Recognition VisualFace (geometry)Case-Control StudiesReaction TimeHumansPsychologyComprehensionPhotic StimulationCognitive psychologyVisual agnosiaAgedNeuropsychologia
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Selective sparing of face learning in a global amnesic patient

2001

Objective - To test the hypothesis that visual memory for faces can be dissociated from visual memory for topographical material. Method - A patient who developed a global amnesic syndrome after acute carbon monoxide poisoning is described. A neuroradiological examination documented severe bilateral atrophy of the hippocampi. Results - Despite a severe anterograde memory disorder involving verbal information, abstract figures, concrete objects, topographical scenes, and spatial information, the patient was still able to learn previously unknown human faces at a normal (and, in some cases, at a higher) rate. Conclusions - Together with previous neuropsychological evidence documenting selecti…

Malegenetic structuresAmnesiaNeurological disorderNeuropsychological TestsHippocampusSeverity of Illness IndexCarbon Monoxide PoisoningAtrophyHippocampuVisual memorySeverity of Illness Index; Acute Disease; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Hippocampus; Carbon Monoxide Poisoning; Humans; Neurologic Examination; Prosopagnosia; Case-Control Studies; Atrophy; Middle Aged; Neuropsychological Tests; Amnesia; MaleAmnesia; Face learning; Acute Disease; Amnesia; Atrophy; Carbon Monoxide Poisoning; Case-Control Studies; Hippocampus; Humans; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Male; Middle Aged; Neurologic Examination; Neuropsychological Tests; Prosopagnosia; Severity of Illness IndexmedicineFace learningDementiaHumansMemory disorderNeurologic ExaminationSettore M-PSI/02 - Psicobiologia E Psicologia FisiologicaNeuropsychologyCognitionMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseMagnetic Resonance ImagingPsychiatry and Mental healthProsopagnosiaCase-Control StudiesPapersAcute DiseaseSettore MED/26 - NeurologiaSurgeryNeuropsychological TestNeurology (clinical)Amnesiamedicine.symptomAtrophyPsychologyCase-Control StudieNeuroscienceHuman
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Naming People Ignoring Semantics in a Patient with Left Frontal Damage

1999

Studies about proper name anomia generally assume that persons' names are harder to recall than other semantic information one knows about them and that name retrieval is not possible without biographical knowledge. We describe a patient, SB, who, after a left frontal haemorrhage, was unable to recall any biographical information about people she could name. Moreover, she had a normal score in an Object Picture Naming Test, but gave confabulatory answers in a Semantic Questionnaire involving the same items. The role of frontal function in producing this pattern of impairment is discussed, together with the possible existence of a direct route from visual perception to proper name retrieval.

Visual perceptionCognitive NeuroscienceExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyNeuropsychological TestsSemanticsSurveys and QuestionnairesHumansProper nounAgedAged 80 and overDysexecutive syndromeRecallObject (philosophy)Frontal LobeSemanticsTest (assessment)StrokeProsopagnosiaNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyFrontal lobeFaceFemaleAmnesiaCuesTomography X-Ray ComputedPsychologyIntracranial HemorrhagesCognitive psychologyCortex
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