Masella Richard S, Meister Malcolm
Department of Orthodontics, College of Dental Medicine, Nova Southeastern University, Fort Lauderdale, Fla, USA.
Am J Orthod Dentofacial Orthop. 2007 Sep;132(3):293-301. doi: 10.1016/j.ajodo.2006.04.031.
Because of familial, ethnic-racial, cultural, and emotional preferences, achieving common facial understanding among orthodontist, patient, parents, and other health care professionals is a daunting communication challenge. Research into the neuroanatomic basis of human facial perception, including the roles of visual short-term memory and long-term memory, might apply to orthodontic facial learning.
In this article, we review findings from functional magnetic resonance imaging and electrophysiology studies of the brain during visual perception and mental imaging of faces, and integrate these findings with facial learning needs in orthodontics.
Research distinguishes specialized brain areas for whole face and face feature perception, the spatial relationship of face features, and facial memory stores. The right anterior temporal lobe's fusiform face area helps recognize facial identity, whereas the bilateral superior temporal sulcus assists in perception of facial expression. The amygdala, hippocampus, and bilateral inferior occipital gyrus help process familiar, unfamiliar, and famous faces. Because visual perceptual experience and processing are individually variable, along with visual short-term memory and long-term memory capacities, it is likely that facial discrimination ability is variable.
Neuroanatomic research shows that each person's brain is as unique as his or her face. Due to variable neural hard-wiring, what the clinician sees facially might not be what the patient or parent sees, and vice versa. Enhanced facial learning is related to creation of a distinctive mental context associated with a facial stimulus and rich mixing between memory and visual perception. This context can be formed by information from clinical examinations, patient databases, patient-parent facial preference questionnaires, and functional face viewing. The more extensive the long-term memory facial links, the better the person knows the face. Facial discrimination exercises with electronic and hard-copy tools might improve facial learning and should be based on defined facial learning objectives. Tools should use facial prototypes and facial-feature spatial-relationship information, and emphasize categorization of whole faces and facial components. These are proven methods of expert recognition of objects having prototypical spatial configuration.
由于家族、种族、文化和情感偏好的存在,正畸医生、患者、家长及其他医疗保健专业人员之间达成对面部的共同理解是一项艰巨的沟通挑战。对人类面部感知的神经解剖学基础的研究,包括视觉短期记忆和长期记忆的作用,可能适用于正畸面部学习。
在本文中,我们回顾了在面部视觉感知和心理成像过程中大脑的功能磁共振成像和电生理研究结果,并将这些结果与正畸学中的面部学习需求相结合。
研究区分了用于全脸和面部特征感知、面部特征的空间关系以及面部记忆存储的专门脑区。右侧颞前叶的梭状面孔区有助于识别面部身份,而双侧颞上沟则有助于对面部表情的感知。杏仁核、海马体和双侧枕下回有助于处理熟悉、不熟悉和著名面孔。由于视觉感知体验和处理因人而异,以及视觉短期记忆和长期记忆能力的差异,面部辨别能力很可能也是可变的。
神经解剖学研究表明,每个人的大脑都如同其面孔一样独特。由于神经连接的差异,临床医生所看到的面部情况可能与患者或家长所看到的不同,反之亦然。增强面部学习与创建与面部刺激相关的独特心理情境以及记忆与视觉感知之间的丰富融合有关。这种情境可以由临床检查、患者数据库、患者 - 家长面部偏好问卷以及功能性面部观察所提供的信息形成。长期记忆中的面部联系越广泛,对该面孔的了解就越好。使用电子和纸质工具进行面部辨别练习可能会改善面部学习,并且应该基于明确的面部学习目标。工具应使用面部原型和面部特征空间关系信息,并强调对面部整体和面部组成部分的分类。这些是专家识别具有原型空间配置的物体的已证实方法。