2007
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0707753104
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Impaired face and body perception in developmental prosopagnosia

Abstract: Prosopagnosia is a deficit in face recognition in the presence of relatively normal object recognition. Together with older lesion studies, recent brain-imaging results provide evidence for the closely related representations of faces and objects and, more recently, for brain areas sensitive to faces and bodies. This evidence raises the issue of whether developmental prosopagnosics may also have an impairment in encoding bodies. We investigated the first stages of face, body, and object perception in four deve… Show more

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Cited by 113 publications
(113 citation statements)
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“…In experiments with small sample sizes, facesensitive N170 components were present in some individuals with DP and absent in others (Bentin et al, 1999;Bentin, DeGutis, D'Esposito, & Robertson, 2007;Kress & Daum, 2003;Harris, Duchaine, & Nakayama, 2005;Righart & De Gelder, 2007;Minnebusch, Suchan, Ramon, & Daum, 2007;Rivolta, Palermo, Schmalzl, & Williams, 2012;Németh, Zimmer, Schweinberger, Vakli, & Kovács, 2014). These findings underline the apparent heterogeneity of DP, and suggest that face recognition deficits in DP may have different causes in different individuals.…”
Section: A Posterior-to-anterior Gradient In the Cortical Basis Of Famentioning
confidence: 59%
“…In experiments with small sample sizes, facesensitive N170 components were present in some individuals with DP and absent in others (Bentin et al, 1999;Bentin, DeGutis, D'Esposito, & Robertson, 2007;Kress & Daum, 2003;Harris, Duchaine, & Nakayama, 2005;Righart & De Gelder, 2007;Minnebusch, Suchan, Ramon, & Daum, 2007;Rivolta, Palermo, Schmalzl, & Williams, 2012;Németh, Zimmer, Schweinberger, Vakli, & Kovács, 2014). These findings underline the apparent heterogeneity of DP, and suggest that face recognition deficits in DP may have different causes in different individuals.…”
Section: A Posterior-to-anterior Gradient In the Cortical Basis Of Famentioning
confidence: 59%
“…Given the closely related representations of faces and bodies (Peelen and Downing, 2007a;Schwarzlose et al, 2005), DP individuals may also have difficulties with configural body processing. This hypothesis has been supported by a recent study of altered ERPs evoked by both faces and bodies in DP subjects (Righart and de Gelder, 2007). Configural processing may thus be relevant for a range of visual stimuli in addition to faces.…”
Section: Clinical Studiesmentioning
confidence: 83%
“…3). Body inversion did not have a significant effect on P1 latency and amplitude (Righart and de Gelder, 2007). Both studies used photographs representing the whole body and faces were masked to minimize the involvement of face processing.…”
Section: Body Perceptionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The deflections in the Event-Related Potentials (ERPs) of face and body perception show several similarities (Stekelenburg and Gliga and Dehaene-Lambertz, 2005;Meeren et al, 2005;Thierry et al, 2006;Righart and de Gelder, 2007). ERPs for faces as well as for bodies show a P1 and a prominent N1 component with similar scalp topography (Stekelenburg and .…”
Section: The Neurophysiology Of Body Perception Implications For Neumentioning
confidence: 92%