TopicPsychology

developmental prosopagnosia

Latest

SeminarPsychology

Investigating face processing impairments in Developmental Prosopagnosia: Insights from behavioural tasks and lived experience

Judith Lowes
University of Stirling
Nov 14, 2023

The defining characteristic of development prosopagnosia is severe difficulty recognising familiar faces in everyday life. Numerous studies have reported that the condition is highly heterogeneous in terms of both presentation and severity with many mixed findings in the literature. I will present behavioural data from a large face processing test battery (n = 24 DPs) as well as some early findings from a larger survey of the lived experience of individuals with DP and discuss how insights from individuals' real-world experience can help to understand and interpret lab-based data.

SeminarPsychology

What's wrong with the prosopagnosia literature? A new approach to diagnosing and researching the condition

Edwin Burns
Edge Hill University
Dec 21, 2022

Developmental prosopagnosia is characterised by severe, lifelong difficulties when recognising facial identity. Most researchers require prosopagnosia cases exhibit ultra-conservative levels of impairment on the Cambridge Face Memory Test before they include them in their experiments. This results in the majority of people who believe that they have this condition being excluded from the scientific literature. In this talk I outline the many issues that will afflict prosopagnosia research if this continues, and show that these excluded cases do exhibit impairments on all commonly used diagnostic tests when a group-based method of assessment is utilised. I propose a paradigm shift away from cognitive task-based approaches to diagnosing prosopagnosia, and outline a new way that researchers can investigate this condition.

SeminarPsychology

Untitled Seminar

Christel Devue
University of Liege
Mar 31, 2022

The nature of facial information that is stored by humans to recognise large amounts of faces is unclear despite decades of research in the field. To complicate matters further, little is known about how representations may evolve as novel faces become familiar, and there are large individual differences in the ability to recognise faces. I will present a theory I am developing and that assumes that facial representations are cost-efficient. In that framework, individual facial representations would incorporate different diagnostic features in different faces, regardless of familiarity, and would evolve depending on the relative stability in appearance over time. Further, coarse information would be prioritised over fine details in order to decrease storage demands. This would create low-cost facial representations that refine over time if appearance changes. Individual differences could partly rest on that ability to refine representation if needed. I will present data collected in the general population and in participants with developmental prosopagnosia. In support of the proposed view, typical observers and those with developmental prosopagnosia seem to rely on coarse peripheral features when they have no reason to expect someone’s appearance will change in the future.

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