Cortex
Volume 46, Issue 8 , Pages 949-964, September 2010

Three cases of developmental prosopagnosia from one family: Detailed neuropsychological and psychophysical investigation of face processing

  • Yunjo Lee

      Affiliations

    • Centre for Vision Research, York University, Toronto, ON, Canada
    • Rotman Research Institute, Baycrest, Toronto, ON, Canada
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Rotman Research Institute, Baycrest Centre, University of Toronto, 3560 Bathurst Street, Toronto, ON M6A 2E1, Canada.
  • ,
  • Bradley Duchaine

      Affiliations

    • Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, University College London, UK
  • ,
  • Hugh R. Wilson

      Affiliations

    • Centre for Vision Research, York University, Toronto, ON, Canada
  • ,
  • Ken Nakayama

      Affiliations

    • Department of Psychology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA

Received 11 September 2008; received in revised form 26 November 2008 and 17 April 2009; accepted 23 July 2009. published online 03 September 2009.

Action editor Stephan Schweinberger

Abstract 

A number of reports have documented that developmental prosopagnosia (DP) can run in families, but the locus of the deficits in those cases remains unclear. We investigated the perceptual basis of three cases of DP from one family (67 year-old father FA, and two daughters, 39 year-old D1 and 34 year-old D2) by combining neuropsychological and psychophysical methods. Neuropsychological tests involving natural facial images demonstrated significant face recognition deficits in the three family members. All three members showed normal facial expression recognition and face detection, and two of them (D2, FA) performed well on within-class object recognition tasks. These individuals were then examined in a series of psychophysical experiments. Intermediate form vision preceding face perception was assessed with radial frequency (RF) patterns. Normal discrimination of RF patterns in these individuals indicates that their face recognition difficulties are higher in the cortical form vision hierarchy than the locus of contour shape processing. Psychophysical experiments requiring discrimination and memory for synthetic faces aimed to quantify their face processing abilities and systematically examine the representation of facial geometry across viewpoints. D1 showed deficits in perceiving geometric information from the face at a given view. D2's impairments seem to arise in later face processing stages involving transferring view-dependent descriptions into a view-invariant representation. FA performed poorly on face learning and recognition relative to the age-appropriate controls. These cases provide evidence for familial transmission of high-level visual recognition deficits with normal intermediate-level form vision.

Keywords: Developmental prosopagnosia, Familial prosopagnosia, Face processing, Intermediate-level form vision, Synthetic faces

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PII: S0010-9452(09)00224-X

doi:10.1016/j.cortex.2009.07.012

Cortex
Volume 46, Issue 8 , Pages 949-964, September 2010