| 31. | It would not be useful in diagnosing patients with associative prosopagnosia since they are able to match faces.
|
| 32. | This is supported by fMRI activation and studies on prosopagnosia, which involves lesions in the fusiform face area.
|
| 33. | Close suffers from prosopagnosia, also known as face blindness, in which he is unable to recognize faces.
|
| 34. | Theory two states that it cannot be observed in developmental cases of prosopagnosia, which was proposed by Grueter.
|
| 35. | Both the control and prosopagnosia patients were able to identify which faces were which therefore reaction time was compared.
|
| 36. | The specific brain area usually associated with prosopagnosia is the fusiform gyrus, which activates specifically in response to faces.
|
| 37. | For those with prosopagnosia, the new method for recognizing faces depends on the less-sensitive object recognition system.
|
| 38. | In 2012, it was shown that developmental prosopagnosia cases show poor integration of low and high spatial frequency information.
|
| 39. | The Cambridge Face Memory Test ( CFMT ) was developed by Duchaine and Nakayama to better diagnose people with prosopagnosia.
|
| 40. | Duchaine and Nakayama showed that the CFMT is more accurate and efficient than previous tests in diagnosing patients with prosopagnosia.
|