Dr Stephane Simon and collaborators in Professor Alan Pegna's laboratory at
The patient was shown photographs of unknown and famous people, some of whom were famous before the onset of her prosopagnosia (and others who had become famous more recently).
Despite the fact that the patient could not recognize any of the famous faces, her brain activity responded to the faces that she would have recognized before the onset of her condition.
"The results of this study demonstrate that implicit processing might continue to occur despite the presence of an apparent impairment in conscious processing," stated Professor Pegna.
"The study has also shed light on what is required for our brain to understand what we see around us.
"Together with other research findings, this study suggests that the collaboration of several cerebral structures in a specific temporal order is necessary for visual awareness to arise," he added.
The study was reported in the July 2011 issue of Elsevier's Cortex.
Source-ANI
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