Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7284141 | Brain and Language | 2015 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
A 20-year old female, AN, with no history of neurological events or detectable lesions, was markedly poorer than controls at identifying her most familiar celebrity voices. She was normal at face recognition and in discriminating which of two speakers uttered a particular sentence. She evidences normal fMRI sensitivity for human speech and non-speech sounds. AN, and two other phonagnosics, were unable to imagine the voices of highly familiar individuals. A region in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) was differentially activated in controls when imagining familiar celebrity voices compared to imagining non-voice sounds. AN evidenced no differential activation in this area, which has been termed a person identity semantic system. Rather than a deficit in the representation of voice-individuating cues, AN may be unable to associate those cues to the identity of a familiar person. In this respect, the deficit in developmental phonagnosia may bear a striking parallel to developmental prosopagnosia.
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Biological Psychiatry
Authors
Xiaokun Xu, Irving Biederman, Bryan E. Shilowich, Sarah B. Herald, Ori Amir, Naomi E. Allen,