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1.
Neuropsychol Rehabil ; 25(5): 733-62, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25369318

ABSTRACT

In this paper we describe the case of EM, a female adolescent who acquired prosopagnosia following encephalitis at the age of eight. Initial neuropsychological and eye-movement investigations indicated that EM had profound difficulties in face perception as well as face recognition. EM underwent 14 weeks of perceptual training in an online programme that attempted to improve her ability to make fine-grained discriminations between faces. Following training, EM's face perception skills had improved, and the effect generalised to untrained faces. Eye-movement analyses also indicated that EM spent more time viewing the inner facial features post-training. Examination of EM's face recognition skills revealed an improvement in her recognition of personally-known faces when presented in a laboratory-based test, although the same gains were not noted in her everyday experiences with these faces. In addition, EM did not improve on a test assessing the recognition of newly encoded faces. One month after training, EM had maintained the improvement on the eye-tracking test, and to a lesser extent, her performance on the familiar faces test. This pattern of findings is interpreted as promising evidence that the programme can improve face perception skills, and with some adjustments, may at least partially improve face recognition skills.


Subject(s)
Facial Recognition , Prosopagnosia/rehabilitation , Recognition, Psychology , Adolescent , Brain/pathology , Emotions , Eye Movements , Female , Humans , Prosopagnosia/pathology , Treatment Outcome , User-Computer Interface , Video Games
2.
Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci ; 10(7): 1010-4, 2015 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25433464

ABSTRACT

Previous work indicates that intranasal inhalation of oxytocin improves face recognition skills, raising the possibility that it may be used in security settings. However, it is unclear whether oxytocin directly acts upon the core face-processing system itself or indirectly improves face recognition via affective or social salience mechanisms. In a double-blind procedure, 60 participants received either an oxytocin or placebo nasal spray before completing the One-in-Ten task-a standardized test of unfamiliar face recognition containing target-present and target-absent line-ups. Participants in the oxytocin condition outperformed those in the placebo condition on target-present trials, yet were more likely to make false-positive errors on target-absent trials. Signal detection analyses indicated that oxytocin induced a more liberal response bias, rather than increasing accuracy per se. These findings support a social salience account of the effects of oxytocin on face recognition and indicate that oxytocin may impede face recognition in certain scenarios.


Subject(s)
Face , Oxytocin/pharmacology , Psychomotor Performance/drug effects , Recognition, Psychology/drug effects , Administration, Intranasal , Affect/drug effects , Double-Blind Method , False Positive Reactions , Female , Humans , Male , Oxytocin/administration & dosage , Photic Stimulation , Signal Detection, Psychological/drug effects , Young Adult
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