Perceptual Disorders Agnosias.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Prosopagnosia.
Advertisements

Human Neuropsychology,
DISORDERS OF AUDITORY PROCESSING 1 DAY 20 – OCT 14, 2013 Brain & Language LING NSCI Harry Howard Tulane University.
Language and Cognition Colombo, June 2011 Day 8 Aphasia: disorders of comprehension.
(2) Face Recognition These notes are the second part of a two-part lecture roughly corresponding to (1) object recognition and (2) face recognition We'll.
Object Recognition Computer Vision CSE399b Spring 2007, Jianbo Shi.
Perception Chapter 4.
Announcement MIDTERM When: 2/ PM Where: 128 Dennison.
Evidence from Lesions: Agnosia Lesions (especially in the left hemisphere) of the inferior temporal cortex lead to disorders of memory for people and things.
Searching for the NCC We can measure all sorts of neural correlates of these processes…so we can see the neural correlates of consciousness right? So what’s.
Dorsal and Ventral Pathways
I. Face Perception II. Visual Imagery. Is Face Recognition Special? Arguments have been made for both functional and neuroanatomical specialization for.
WHAT, WHERE, & HOW SYSTEMS AGNOSIAS!. What, Where, & How Systems.
Vision. Vision 1: Filling-in, Color, Motion, Form Visual Paths Filling-In –Perceptual Completion –Conceptual Completion Color Motion Form –Agnosia –Prosopagnosia.
Cognitive Processes PSY 334 Chapter 2 – Perception June 30, 2003.
Deficits of vision What do visual deficits tell us about the structure of the visual system?
Visual Cognition I basic processes. What is perception good for? We often receive incomplete information through our senses. Information can be highly.
Beyond the Striate Cortex. Extrastriate Pathways  Parallel processing of visual information from the striate cortex.  Three pathways: Color processing.
Cognitive Processes PSY 334 Chapter 2 – Perception.
Despite adjustments to the Wernicke-Lichtheim model, there remained disorders which could not be explained. Later models (e.g., Heilman’s) have included.
The Brain.
Human Cognitive Processes: psyc 345 Ch. 3: Perception Takashi Yamauchi © Takashi Yamauchi (Dept. of Psychology, Texas A&M University)

Perception 2. Figure 2-19 An example of context effects in perception. Top-Down Processes.
.. Slide 2 Neuroscience: Exploring the Brain, 3rd Ed, Bear, Connors, and Paradiso Copyright © 2007 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins The Retinofugal Projection.
Vision. 2 Brodmann Original Calcarine 17 Collateral Sulcus Fusiform Gyrus 18.
Announcement MIDTERM When: 2/ PM Where: 182 Dennison.
Agnosia and Perceptual Disturbances March 27, 2006.
Perception.
Mind, Brain & Behavior Wednesday February 19, 2003.
Fundamentals of Sensation and Perception RECOGNIZING VISUAL OBJECTS ERIK CHEVRIER NOVEMBER 23, 2015.
Face Recognition. Name these famous faces Cohen (1989) distinguishes between a) Face identification: looking at a person’s face and knowing who it is.
Visual Agnosias Specification: Theories of perceptual organisation
How we actively interpret our environment..  Perception: The process in which we understand sensory information.  Illusions are powerful examples of.
CHAPTER 10 Vision and visual perception Form Vision.
Perception  How do we define it? How we recognize and interpret stimuli How we recognize and interpret stimuli Top down processing… Top down processing…
Agnosia and Perceptual Disturbances March 17, 2008.
Blindsight Patients with scotomas could move eyes to the location of a light flash (Poppel et al., 1973). Case D.B. (Larry Weizkrantz) hemianopic with.
Recognizing Visual and Auditory Stimuli
Physiology of Cerebral Cortex
Prefrontal Cortex “Executive functions”: planning, behavioral inhibition, emotional regulation, forward thinking, achieving goals, personality expression,
COGS 172 VISION CONTINUED Visual form agnosia
The Retinofugal Projection
The Eye Processing in Brain Color
A Unified Coding Strategy for Processing Faces and Voices
Cognitive Processes PSY 334
Prof. Riyadh Al_Azzawi F.R.C.Psych
Perception Unit How can we so easily perceive the world? Objects may be moving, partially hidden, varying in orientation, and projected as a 2D image.
Feature based vs. holistic processing
Lateralization of Function of the Human Brain
Bell Work What occurs when experiences influence our interpretation of data? A. Selective attention B. Transduction C. Bottum-up processing D. Top-down.
12.2 General and Special Senses
Prosopagnosia.
1. What is an illusion? A perceptual experience in which you perceive an image as being so strangely distorted that, in reality, it cannot and does not.
The Eye Processing in Brain Color
Review Session 3: Sensation and Perception
Optic Nerve Projections
Feature based vs. holistic processing
Prof. Riyadh Al_Azzawi F.R.C.Psych
How you perceive your surroundings
Mind, Brain & Behavior Wednesday February 12, 2003.
Cognitive Processes PSY 334
Senses and Perception.
Cognitive Processes PSY 334
Perception.
Introduction to Perception: Visual Perception
Prof. Riyadh Al_Azzawi F.R.C.Psych
Bruce & Young’s model of face recognition (1986)
Perception.
Attention and Scene Perception
Presentation transcript:

Perceptual Disorders Agnosias

Disorders of Object Recognition AGNOSIA : a general term for a loss of ability to recognize objects, people, sounds, shapes, or smells. Agnosias result from damage to cortical areas of the visual system (retina and optic nerve are not impaired, nor is visual acuity, color, motion or depth perception impaired). cogch2 pt 2

Apperceive Agnosia and Associative Agnosia. DSM does not officially categorize agnosia however, they are commonly divided into two categories:  Apperceive Agnosia and Associative Agnosia. cogch2 pt 2

Apperceptive Agnosias (Difficulty with perceptual processes) Have trouble recognizing, copying, or discriminating between different visual stimuli. Ex. may not be able to distinguish a poker chip from a scrabble tile despite there clear difference in shape and surface features. cogch2 pt 2

Simultanagnosia refers to an inability to recognize two or more things at the same time. cogch2 pt 2

Simultanagnosia: lose the ability to see "global" objects, and can only very narrowly focus their visual attention. For example, in this image: they can see "T"s but not the "H".

may have difficulty reading and counting because these activities involve viewing more than one thing at a time.   may seem to be "blind" since they bump into objects that are close together. Motion may further impair their ability to perceive objects. cogch2 pt 2

When patients are able to identify objects, they do so based on inferences using color, size, texture and memory to piece it together. Video (begin @ .33) cogch2 pt 2

Associative agnosias - perceptual processes are intact but patient is unable to recognize visually presented objects may be able to replicate a drawing of the object but still fail to recognize it. cogch2 pt 2

Object Recognition Apperceptive Agnosia Associative Agnosia Integrating or Combing features Shape Processing cogch2 pt 2

Auditory Agnosia:  - inability to recognize or differentiate between sounds. Verbal auditory agnosia (aka: pure word deafness) refers to deficits specific to speech processing, Environmental sound agnosia refers to difficulties confined to non- speech environmental sounds. Amusia refers to deficits confined to music. These deficits can be apperceptive, affecting basic perceptual processes, or associative, affecting the relation of a perceived auditory object to its meaning. 

Prosopagnosia: Face blindness Prosopagnosia is a selective and often severe deficit in the ability to recognize others’ faces. People suffering from the disorder are often unable to recognize their friends and family members by face alone, instead relying on vocal cues for proper identification. They cannot name images of celebrities, even if they can describe who the celebrity is. They often describe faces as nearly indistinguishable; one patient characterized faces as “strangely flat, white with emphatic dark eyes, as if made from a flat surface, like white, oval plates, all alike.” However, their general visual ability and recognition of non-face objects often remains intact. Source

Oliver Sacks on Agnosia and Face blindness

Video described a woman who could not recognize her family’s faces or her own. She could recognize people through voices, hair color, eye color… cogch2 pt 2

Face Recognition Is it different than Object recognition? Yes. More Holistic - altering the appearance of one facial region can strikingly affect the percept of other regions and of the whole face (Part-whole illusion). Perceptual Disorders

Part-whole illusion. Part-whole illusion. The only difference between the two images is the mouth. Altering the mouth creates illusions of alteration in regions of the rest of the face (e.g., makes the nose appear shorter on left and longer on right, makes the eyes appear more interested on left and less interested on right). In the inverted version, the difference in the mouth shape can be easily seen but the illusory changes in the rest of the face are not apparent. cogch2 pt 2

Composite Face Illusion cogch2 pt 2

Composite Face Illusion Explanation Composite stimuli are whole faces comprised of two halves taken from different individuals. When asked to decide if two identical top halves are the ‘same’, subjects are more accurate (or faster to respond) in misaligned trials, than in aligned trials. This performance advantage for misaligned trials is referred to as the composite face effect (CFE). The proposed explanation is that aligned features are automatically fused together and form a global identity that interferes with the recognition of smaller components (the composite face illusion, CFI). However, when composite faces are misaligned, it appears to be much easier to ignore the identity of the whole face and process individual features. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.visres.2009.04.025

Fusiform Face Area of temporal Lobe. source cogch2 pt 2

When doctors stimulated two spots in his fusiform gyrus, Blackwell, who does not ordinarily suffer from face blindness, could still remember his doctor's name, and he could read words and identify objects in his hospital room. But a video taken of the test shows Blackwell telling Parvizi, "Your nose got saggy, went to the left. You almost looked like somebody I'd seen before, somebody different." A few minutes later, Parvizi stimulated the same bundles of nerves and asked Blackwell to look at a different doctor in the room. "The bottom of her face sort of metamorphosed up," Blackwell said. "It kind of stretched up to give her a different look. Um, it wasn't pretty."

Bruce and Young (1986) model of face recognition. Face detection followed by processing of the face’s structure which is then matched to a memory representation (face memory). The perceptual representation of the face can also be used for recognition of facial expression and gender discrimination. cogch2 pt 2

Evidence of separate processes Case Study of Edward: impaired face recognition but normal face detection. Some Prosopagnosia patients cannot recognize faces but can recognize emotions. Alexithymia - Emotion blindness cogch2 pt 2

Individual differences in Face Recognition Ability Developmental vs. Acquired Prosopagnosia Criminal Justice Application Want to test your own Face Recognition Ability cogch2 pt 2