Face-specific impairment in holistic perception following focal lesion of the right anterior temporal lobe

Recent studies have provided solid evidence for pure cases of prosopagnosia following brain damage. The patients reported so far have posterior lesions encompassing either or both the right inferior occipital cortex and fusiform gyrus, and exhibit a critical impairment in generating a sufficiently d...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neuropsychologia 2014-04, Vol.56, p.312-333
Hauptverfasser: Busigny, Thomas, Van Belle, Goedele, Jemel, Boutheina, Hosein, Anthony, Joubert, Sven, Rossion, Bruno
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creator Busigny, Thomas
Van Belle, Goedele
Jemel, Boutheina
Hosein, Anthony
Joubert, Sven
Rossion, Bruno
description Recent studies have provided solid evidence for pure cases of prosopagnosia following brain damage. The patients reported so far have posterior lesions encompassing either or both the right inferior occipital cortex and fusiform gyrus, and exhibit a critical impairment in generating a sufficiently detailed holistic percept to individualize faces. Here, we extended these observations to include the prosopagnosic patient LR (Bukach, Bub, Gauthier, & Tarr, 2006), whose damage is restricted to the anterior region of the right temporal lobe. First, we report that LR is able to discriminate parametrically defined individual exemplars of nonface object categories as accurately and quickly as typical observers, which suggests that the visual similarity account of prosopagnosia does not explain his impairments. Then, we show that LR does not present with the typical face inversion effect, whole-part advantage, or composite face effect and, therefore, has impaired holistic perception of individual faces. Moreover, the patient is more impaired at matching faces when the facial part he fixates is masked than when it is selectively revealed by means of gaze contingency. Altogether these observations support the view that the nature of the critical face impairment does not differ qualitatively across patients with acquired prosopagnosia, regardless of the localization of brain damage: all these patients appear to be impaired to some extent at what constitutes the heart of our visual expertise with faces, namely holistic perception at a sufficiently fine-grained level of resolution to discriminate exemplars of the face class efficiently. This conclusion raises issues regarding the existing criteria for diagnosis/classification of patients as cases of apperceptive or associative prosopagnosia. •Right anterior temporal lobe (rATL) damage can impair face recognition selectively.•RATL damage can impair perception of individual faces.•Prosopagnosics with posterior or anterior lesions are qualitatively similar.•There is no clear-cut dissociation between apperceptive and associative prosopagnosia.•The rATL plays a crucial role in the interplay between face memory and perception.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2014.01.018
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Moreover, the patient is more impaired at matching faces when the facial part he fixates is masked than when it is selectively revealed by means of gaze contingency. Altogether these observations support the view that the nature of the critical face impairment does not differ qualitatively across patients with acquired prosopagnosia, regardless of the localization of brain damage: all these patients appear to be impaired to some extent at what constitutes the heart of our visual expertise with faces, namely holistic perception at a sufficiently fine-grained level of resolution to discriminate exemplars of the face class efficiently. 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subjects Acquired prosopagnosia
Adult and adolescent clinical studies
Aged
Anterior temporal lobe
Biological and medical sciences
Brain Injuries - complications
Brain Injuries - pathology
Discrimination (Psychology)
Disorders of higher nervous function. Focal brain diseases. Central vestibular syndrome and deafness. Brain stem syndromes
Face
Face perception
Functional Laterality - physiology
Holistic perception
Humans
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Male
Medical sciences
Middle Aged
Nervous system (semeiology, syndromes)
Neurology
Neuropsychological Tests
Organic mental disorders. Neuropsychology
Pattern Recognition, Visual - physiology
Perceptual Disorders - etiology
Photic Stimulation
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychopathology. Psychiatry
Reaction Time - physiology
Right hemisphere
Temporal Lobe - pathology
Tomography Scanners, X-Ray Computed
title Face-specific impairment in holistic perception following focal lesion of the right anterior temporal lobe
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