Manuel Alejandro Mejía, Mitchell Valdés-Sosa, Beatrice de Gelder, Maria Antonieta Bobes
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Disconnection between parietal and temporal areas without simultanagnosia: a case study of prosopagnosia.
This study presents a neuropsychological evaluation of a unique case of prosopagnosia (patient EP) with atypical lesion patterns, characterized by intact face-selective nodes but significant damage to the Vertical Occipital Fasciculus (VOF). Given the presumed interruption of ventral-parietal connectivity, we focused on assessing the potential presence of simultanagnosia and its potential relationship to his face recognition deficits. Our neuropsychological battery included tests of global and local processing, scene perception, and face recognition. Results revealed intact global processing abilities and no evidence of simultanagnosia, despite the patient's prosopagnosia. These findings suggest that EP's face recognition impairment is likely attributable to disrupted connectivity within the face processing network rather than a general deficit in global/holistic processing. This case highlights the importance of comprehensive neuropsychological assessments in atypical presentations of prosopagnosia and contributes to our understanding of the complex relationship between white matter integrity and face recognition abilities.
期刊介绍:
Neurocase is a rapid response journal of case studies and innovative group studies in neuropsychology, neuropsychiatry and behavioral neurology that speak to the neural basis of cognition. Four types of manuscript are considered for publication: single case investigations that bear directly on issues of relevance to theoretical issues or brain-behavior relationships; group studies of subjects with brain dysfunction that address issues relevant to the understanding of human cognition; reviews of important topics in the domains of neuropsychology, neuropsychiatry and behavioral neurology; and brief reports (up to 2500 words) that replicate previous reports dealing with issues of considerable significance. Of particular interest are investigations that include precise anatomical localization of lesions or neural activity via imaging or other techniques, as well as studies of patients with neurodegenerative diseases, since these diseases are becoming more common as our population ages. Topic reviews are included in most issues.