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What is special about face recognition? nineteen experiments on a person with visual object agnosia and dyslexia but normal face recognition

Published: 01 October 1997 Publication History

Abstract

In order to study face recognition in relative isolation from visual processes that may also contribute to object recognition and reading, we investigated CK, a man with normal face recognition but with object agnosia and dyslexia caused by a closed-head injury. We administered recognition tests of up right faces, of family resemblance, of age-transformed faces, of caricatures, of cartoons, of inverted faces, and of face features, of disguised faces, of perceptually degraded faces, of fractured faces, of faces parts, and of faces whose parts were made of objects. We compared CK's performance with that of at least 12 control participants. We found that CK performed as well as controls as long as the face was upright and retained the configurational integrity among the internal facial features, the eyes, nose, and mouth. This held regardless of whether the face was disguised or degraded and whether the face was represented as a photo, a caricature, a cartoon, or a face composed of objects. In the last case, CK perceived the face but, unlike controls, was rarely aware that it was composed of objects. When the face, or just the internal features, were inverted or when the configurational gestalt was broken by fracturing the face or misaligning the top and bottom halves, CK's performance suffered far more than that of controls. We conclude that face recognition normally depends on two systems: (1) a holistic, face-specific system that is dependent on orientationspecific coding of second-order relational features (internal), which is intact in CK and (2) a part-based object-recognition system, which is damaged in CK and which contributes to face recognition when the face stimulus does not satisfy the domain-specific conditions needed to activate the face system.

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  1. What is special about face recognition? nineteen experiments on a person with visual object agnosia and dyslexia but normal face recognition

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    Published In

    cover image Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
    Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience  Volume 9, Issue 5
    Fall 1997
    144 pages
    ISSN:0898-929X
    EISSN:1530-8898
    Issue’s Table of Contents

    Publisher

    MIT Press

    Cambridge, MA, United States

    Publication History

    Published: 01 October 1997

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    • (2018)The fusiform and occipital face areas can process a nonface category equivalently to facesJournal of Cognitive Neuroscience10.1162/jocn_a_0128830:10(1499-1516)Online publication date: 1-Oct-2018
    • (2014)Human Perception of Visual Realism for Photo and Computer-Generated Face ImagesACM Transactions on Applied Perception10.1145/262003011:2(1-21)Online publication date: 30-Jul-2014
    • (2014)ROBUSTNESS INSTEAD OF ACCURACY SHOULD BE THE PRIMARY OBJECTIVE FOR SUBJECTIVE PATTERN RECOGNITION RESEARCHComputational Intelligence10.1111/j.1467-8640.2012.00439.x30:2(167-204)Online publication date: 1-May-2014
    • (2014)Dynamic Perceptual Objects11th International Conference on Engineering Psychology and Cognitive Ergonomics - Volume 853210.1007/978-3-319-07515-0_16(155-163)Online publication date: 22-Jun-2014
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    • (2009)Probing the uncanny valley with the eye size aftereffectPresence: Teleoperators and Virtual Environments10.1162/pres.18.5.32118:5(321-339)Online publication date: 1-Oct-2009
    • (2008)Sketching facesProceedings of the Fifth Eurographics conference on Sketch-Based Interfaces and Modeling10.5555/2386301.2386320(105-112)Online publication date: 11-Jun-2008
    • (2008)The representation of parts and wholes in face-selective cortexJournal of Cognitive Neuroscience10.5555/1362432.136244220:5(863-878)Online publication date: 1-May-2008
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    • (2007)Robust face recognition strategies using feed-forward architectures and partsProceedings of the 3rd international conference on Analysis and modeling of faces and gestures10.5555/1775256.1775282(290-304)Online publication date: 20-Oct-2007
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