CAN WE LOSE MEMORIES OF FACES - CONTENT SPECIFICITY AND AWARENESS IN A PROSOPAGNOSIC

被引:77
作者
ETCOFF, NL
FREEMAN, R
CAVE, KR
机构
[1] MASSACHUSETTS GEN HOSP,NEUROPSYCHOL LAB,BOSTON,MA 02114
[2] BETH ISRAEL HOSP,BOSTON,MA 02215
[3] HARVARD UNIV,SCH MED,BOSTON,MA 02115
[4] NEW ENGLAND DEACONESS HOSP,DIV NEUROL,BOSTON,MA 02215
[5] UNIV CALIF SAN DIEGO,DEPT PSYCHOL,SAN DIEGO,CA 92103
关键词
D O I
10.1162/jocn.1991.3.1.25
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Prosopagnosia is a neurological syndrome in which patients cannot recognize faces. Recently it has been shown that some prosopagnosics give evidence of "covert" recognition: they show greater autonomic responses to familar faces than to unfamiliar ones, and respond differently to familiar faces in learning and interference tasks. Although some patients do not show covert recognition, this has usually been attributed to an "apperceptive" deficit that impairs perceptual analysis of the input. The implication is that prosopagnosia is a deficit in access to, or awareness of, memories of faces: the inducing brain injury does not destroy the memories themselves. We present a case study that challenges this view. LH suffers from prosopagnosia as the result of a closed head injury. He cannot recognize familiar faces or report that they are familiar, nor answer questions about the faces from memory, though he can (1) recognize common objects and subtly varying shapes, (2) match faces while ignoring irrelevant information such as emotional expression or angle of view, (3) recognize sex, age, and likeability from faces, and (4) recognize people by a number of nonfacial channels. The only other categories of shapes that he has marked trouble recognizing are animals and emotional expressions, though even these impairments were not as severe as the one for faces. Three measures (sympathetic skin response, pupil dilation, and learning correct and incorrect names of faces) failed to show any signs of covert face recognition in LH, though the measures were sensitive enough to reflect autonomic reactions in LH to stimuli other than faces, and face familiarity in normal controls. Thus prosopagnosia cannot always be attributed to a mere absence of awareness (i.e., preserved information about faces whose output is disconnected from conscious congnitive processing), to an apperceptive deficit (i.e., preserved information about faces that cannot be accessed due to improperly analyzed perceptual input), or to an inability to recognize complex or subtly varying shapes (i.e., loss or degradation of shape memory in general). We conclude that it is possible for brain injury to eliminate the storage of information about familiar faces and certain related shapes.
引用
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页码:25 / 41
页数:17
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