Article
Details
Citation
Lowes J, Hancock PJB & Bobak AK (2024) Evidence for different visual processing strategy for non-face stimuli in developmental prosopagnosia. Visual Cognition. https://doi.org/10.1080/13506285.2024.2359743
Abstract
We assembled a test battery to investigate developmental prosopagnosia (DP), a neurodevelopmental syndrome resulting in severe face recognition difficulties. To screen for general cognitive deficits that could explain poor face test performance, participants completed a fluid reasoning task using abstract shapes. This initial screening showed that DPs (n = 21) were more accurate than neurotypical controls (n = 90) but significantly slower, suggesting speed accuracy trade-off. To address this, we calculated the Balanced Integration Score and found no group differences, highlighting that DPs clearly adopted a different strategy from controls. DPs’
longer response times (RT) on face tasks vs controls are commonly interpreted as evidence of impairment and of lengthy, atypical featural face processing. Our data suggest this interpretation
may be unreliable since clear RT differences were also observed in two non-face tasks where DPs showed no accuracy impairment. Instead, slower RTs appear to reflect a strategy shift in DPs.
Keywords
Developmental prosopagnosia; speed-accuracy trade off; face recognition; fluid reasoning; visual processing
Journal
Visual Cognition
Status | Early Online |
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Funders | Economic and Social Research Council, British Psychological Society and The Leverhulme Trust |
Publication date online | 05/07/2024 |
Date accepted by journal | 20/05/2024 |
URL | http://hdl.handle.net/1893/36327 |
Publisher | Informa UK Limited |
ISSN | 1350-6285 |
eISSN | 1464-0716 |
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