AI Article Synopsis

  • Prosopagnosia is a disorder that impairs face recognition, but those with congenital prosopagnosia can recognize their own face better than others.
  • A study involving eight individuals with congenital prosopagnosia and 22 controls found that while both groups showed a self-recognition advantage, those with prosopagnosia had a stronger self-advantage specifically for faces compared to body parts.
  • The findings indicate that the self-advantage in recognizing one's own face and body parts may share a common underlying mechanism, suggesting the ability is not limited to just faces.

Article Abstract

Prosopagnosia is a disorder leading to difficulties in recognizing faces. However, recent evidence suggests that individuals with congenital prosopagnosia can achieve considerable accuracy when they have to recognize their own faces (self-face advantage). Yet, whether this advantage is face-specific or not is still unclear. Here, we aimed to investigate whether individuals with congenial prosopagnosia show a self-advantage also in recognizing other self body-parts and, if so, whether the advantage for the body parts differs from the one characterizing the self-face. Eight individuals with congenital prosopagnosia and 22 controls underwent a delayed matching task in which they were required to recognize faces, hands and feet belonging to the self or to others. Controls showed a similar self-advantage for all the stimuli tested; by contrast, individuals with congenital prosopagnosia showed a larger self-advantage with faces compared to hands and feet, mainly driven by their deficit with others' faces. In both groups the self-advantages for the different body parts were strongly and significantly correlated. Our data suggest that the self-face advantage showed by individuals with congenital prosopagnosia is not face-specific and that the same mechanism could be responsible for both the self-face and self body-part advantages.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00221-018-5452-7DOI Listing

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