We read a variety of
significant information from the face such as identity, mood, age, gender, and
race. We can do this unconsciously because we have hundreds of millions of
neurons whose purpose is to process information about the face.
However, damage to the
temporal lobe can cause prosopagnosia. Prosopagnosia is the difficultly
recognizing the faces of familiar people (p.93). People with this condition may
not be able to recognize close friends, family members, or even themselves.
People with prosopagnosia may compensate by learning secondary cues such as
clothing, hair color, hairstyle, body shape, and voice.
I can’t imagine all the
troubles one with prosopagnosia may face in their lifetime. I work in a café
and during the early morning rush, there are several customers ordering at the
same time. Regularly, I have to prepare the orders and remember who order what
by their faces. Someone with prosopagnosia would most likely not be able to
work in the food industry because remembering orders by faces is an important
aspect to keep the customers happy and avoid confusion. Also, it must be really
difficult to follow TV shows and movies when you can’t recognize the
characters. Someone with prosopagnosia may find it difficult to socialize
normally because they only see indistinguishable faces. Someone with this
condition may meet someone repeatedly, but every time they see someone it is
often like the first time.
Here’s a youtube of two men
and the way they cope with prosopagnosia:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bAUfCxxytwg
I really like the approach of
Chuck Close. He is very positive and says that you have to prove to the people
you see that you care about them even though you will not recognize them. His
approach is to be more outgoing and friendly. I see this man as an inspiration.
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