Evidence for normal novel object recognition abilities in developmental prosopagnosia

Author:

Fry Regan12ORCID,Wilmer Jeremy3,Xie Isabella45,Verfaellie Mieke67,DeGutis Joseph12

Affiliation:

1. Boston Attention and Learning Laboratory, VA Boston Healthcare System, Boston, MA, USA

2. Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA

3. Department of Psychology, Wellesley College, Wellesley, MA, USA

4. Washington University in St Louis, St Louis, MO, USA

5. Harvard Decision Science Lab, Harvard Kennedy School, Cambridge, MA, USA

6. Memory Disorders Research Center, VA Boston Healthcare System, Boston, MA, USA

7. Department of Psychiatry, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA, USA

Abstract

The issue of the face specificity of recognition deficits in developmental prosopagnosia (DP) is fundamental to the organization of high-level visual memory and has been increasingly debated in recent years. Previous DP investigations have found some evidence of object recognition impairments, but have almost exclusively used familiar objects (e.g. cars), where performance may depend on acquired object-specific experience and related visual expertise. An object recognition test not influenced by experience could provide a better, less contaminated measure of DPs' object recognition abilities. To investigate this, in the current study we tested 30 DPs and 30 matched controls on a novel object memory test (NOMT Ziggerins) and the Cambridge Face Memory Test (CFMT). DPs with severe impairment on the CFMT showed no differences in accuracy or reaction times compared with controls on the NOMT. We found similar results when comparing DPs with a larger sample of 274 web-based controls. Additional individual analyses demonstrated that the rate of object recognition impairment in DPs did not differ from the rate of impairment in either control group. Together, these results demonstrate unimpaired object recognition in DPs for a class of novel objects that serves as a powerful index for broader novel object recognition capacity.

Funder

National Eye Institute

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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