Neural computations in prosopagnosia

Author:

Faghel-Soubeyrand Simon12ORCID,Richoz Anne-Raphaelle3,Waeber Delphine3,Woodhams Jessica4,Caldara Roberto3,Gosselin Frédéric1,Charest Ian1

Affiliation:

1. Département de psychologie, Université de Montréal , 90 av. Vincent D’indy, Montreal, H2V 2S9 , Canada

2. Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford , Anna Watts Building, Woodstock Rd, Oxford OX2 6GG

3. Département de psychologie, Université de Fribourg , RM 01 bu. C-3.117Rue P.A. de Faucigny 21700 Fribourg , Switzerland

4. School of Psychology, University of Birmingham , Hills Building, Edgbaston Park Rd, Birmingham B15 2TT , UK

Abstract

Abstract We report an investigation of the neural processes involved in the processing of faces and objects of brain-lesioned patient PS, a well-documented case of pure acquired prosopagnosia. We gathered a substantial dataset of high-density electrophysiological recordings from both PS and neurotypicals. Using representational similarity analysis, we produced time-resolved brain representations in a format that facilitates direct comparisons across time points, different individuals, and computational models. To understand how the lesions in PS’s ventral stream affect the temporal evolution of her brain representations, we computed the temporal generalization of her brain representations. We uncovered that PS’s early brain representations exhibit an unusual similarity to later representations, implying an excessive generalization of early visual patterns. To reveal the underlying computational deficits, we correlated PS’ brain representations with those of deep neural networks (DNN). We found that the computations underlying PS’ brain activity bore a closer resemblance to early layers of a visual DNN than those of controls. However, the brain representations in neurotypicals became more akin to those of the later layers of the model compared to PS. We confirmed PS’s deficits in high-level brain representations by demonstrating that her brain representations exhibited less similarity with those of a DNN of semantics.

Funder

ERC

ERSC-IAA

Swiss National Science Foundation

NSERC

IVADO

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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4. Detailed exploration of face-related processing in congenital prosopagnosia: 2. Functional neuroimaging findings. In;Avidan;J Cogn Neurosci,2005

5. Selective dissociation between core and extended regions of the face processing network in congenital prosopagnosia;Avidan;Cereb Cortex,2014

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