Local but not long-range microstructural differences of the ventral temporal cortex in developmental prosopagnosia

  • Sunbin Song
  • Lúcia Garrido
  • Zoltan Nagy
  • Siawoosh Mohammadi
  • Adam Steel
  • Jon Driver
  • Ray J Dolan
  • Bradley Duchaine
  • Nicholas Furl

Abstract

Individuals with developmental prosopagnosia (DP) experience face recognition impairments despite normal intellect and low-level vision and no history of brain damage. Prior studies using diffusion tensor imaging in small samples of subjects with DP (n=6 or n=8) offer conflicting views on the neurobiological bases for DP, with one suggesting white matter differences in two major long-range tracts running through the temporal cortex, and another suggesting white matter differences confined to fibers local to ventral temporal face-specific functional regions of interest (fROIs) in the fusiform gyrus. Here, we address these inconsistent findings using a comprehensive set of analyzes in a sample of DP subjects larger than both prior studies combined (n=16). While we found no microstructural differences in long-range tracts between DP and age-matched control participants, we found differences local to face-specific fROIs, and relationships between these microstructural measures with face recognition ability. We conclude that subtle differences in local rather than long-range tracts in the ventral temporal lobe are more likely associated with developmental prosopagnosia.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN0028-3932
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 11.2015
PubMed 26456436