Prosopagnosia
From Psy3241
Agnosia disorders include various cognitive disorders that deal with "not knowing" impariments
such as auditory agnosia which is the inability to recognize sounds or visual object agnosia
which is the inability to recognize familar objects that can be seen. Visual object agnosia
is similar to prosopagnosia and most patients with visual object agnosia also have
prosopagnosia. Prosopagnosia is the inability to recognize faces on sight and is usually
associated with bilateral occipital damage. A patient named Michael was diagnosed with
prosopagnosia and a few other agnosia disorders. Michael is incapable of recognizing any faces
desipte the familiarity and he has not been able to for 17 years. He never recognizes his mother
until she speaks and when asked to identify himself in family photos he is incapable of doing
so. He does have the ability to recollect faces if asked to describe someone famous or a family
member yet when presented with a picture of that person he still is not able to recognize their
face or to identify the person by picture.
The study of prosopagnosia has been crucial in the development of theories of face perception. Because prosopagnosia is not a unitary disorder (i.e., different people may show different types and levels of impairment) it has been argued that face perception involves a number of stages, each of which can be separately damaged. This is reflected not just in the amount of impairment displayed but also in the qualitative differences in impairment that a person with prosopagnosia may present with.
This sort of evidence has been crucial in supporting the theory that there may be a specific face perception system in the brain. This is counter-intuitive to many people as we do not experience faces as 'special' or perceived in a different way from the rest of the world.