prosopagnosia

neurological disorder
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Also known as: facial agnosia, facial blindness
Also called:
facial blindness or facial agnosia

prosopagnosia, neurological disorder in which affected persons are unable to recognize faces, despite having healthy vision and normal memory and intelligence. The severity of prosopagnosia ranges from mild to severe, from the inability to recognize faces seen only a small number of times to the inability to distinguish a face from an inanimate object. In between those two extremes are many variations; for example, the condition may apply to familiar faces, to one’s own face, or to facial expressions. In some cases, individuals cannot tell the difference between two faces or cannot match two images of the same face. Awareness of the disorder was greatly elevated with the bestselling book The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat and Other Clinical Tales (1985) by British neurologist Oliver Sacks.

Estimates suggest that prosopagnosia is present to some degree in about 2 percent of the population. Since a person with prosopagnosia may have difficulty recognizing even close family and friends, the condition can be traumatic. Patients often experience anxiety and a loss of self-confidence and are likely to encounter difficulties with employment and social relationships.

Types and pathophysiology

Prosopagnosia may occur as a congenital disorder, being present at birth, or it may be acquired. Congenital prosopagnosia (or developmental prosopagnosia) occurs in the absence of brain injury, such that the individual has typical sensory and intellectual function; the condition usually becomes apparent in early childhood. Congenital prosopagnosia is suspected of being inherited in an autosomal dominant fashion, with one copy of the mutated gene from one parent being sufficient to cause the condition; the mode of inheritance as well as the underlying genetic cause, however, remain unclear. Acquired prosopagnosia may be caused by brain injury, neurodegenerative disease, or stroke.

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Multiple areas of the brain are involved in face recognition and face processing, including the amygdala, fusiform face area (FFA), occipital face area (OFA), and superior temporal sulcus. The network running from the visual cortex to the OFA, the FFA, and eventually the anterior temporal area serves a fundamental role in the identification and storage of information about individual faces. In particular, injury to the right FFA is known to result in prosopagnosia, and neural connectivity within the right FFA is known to be altered in congenital prosopagnosia. The congenital form of prosopagnosia also is associated with reduced neural connectivity between the prefrontal and visual cortices. A significant proportion of patients with congenital prosopagnosia experience reduced social motivation, similar to patients with autism spectrum disorder, suggesting a possible relationship between the two conditions.

Diagnosis and treatment

Variations in the exact location of the causative injury in the brain can impact the precise symptoms that manifest in an individual affected by prosopagnosia. Diagnosis centres on distinguishing prosopagnosia from losses in memory or attention that may also affect facial recognition. An example of a diagnostic test for prosopagnosia is the Cambridge Face Memory Test, which removes non-facial cues from images that might otherwise allow persons with prosopagnosia to correctly answer face-matching or face-recognition questions.

Treatment for prosopagnosia generally is aimed at helping affected individuals learn to recognize others based on non-facial cues, or compensatory behaviours. For example, non-facial cues—such as voice, hairstyle, or clothing—can be used to recognize individuals over the course of an event or, more generally, over time. Individuals with prosopagnosia also potentially can be retrained on facial-recognition tasks, essentially relearning associations between faces and identities through repeated training sessions. These treatments tend to be more effective for patients with congenital prosopagnosia than for those with acquired prosopagnosia. Congenital prosopagnosia patients may also show improvements in facial processing when given a dose of oxytocin, a hormone that enhances social affiliation.

Prosopagnosia usually is permanent. Some persons with acquired prosopagnosia, however, spontaneously recover facial-recognition abilities; this could be the result of either physical recovery from injury, with eventual restoration of brain function, or reorganization of the facial-processing locations in the brain.

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Karin Akre