Nador Jeffrey D, Uittenhove Kim, Gordillo Dario, Ramon Meike
Applied Face Cognition Lab, Business School, Bern University of Applied Sciences, Bern, Switzerland.
Center for Learning Science, EPFL, Lausanne, Switzerland.
Brain Topogr. 2025 Aug 28;38(5):61. doi: 10.1007/s10548-025-01136-9.
The term Super-Recognizer (SR), which describes individuals with supposedly superior facial recognition abilities, may be something of a misnomer. In the same way that blind individuals would not be considered prosopagnosic, SR diagnoses should emphasise at least face identity processing (FIP) specificity, if not recognition in particular. However, SRs tend to be diagnosed with face-specific behavioral tasks, probing either perception and/or recognition, and leaving the neural basis and mechanisms underlying their abilities largely unexplored. The present study therefore sought to determine whether any common FIP subprocesses, among a sample of stringently and comparably diagnosed SRs, would distinguish them from neurotypical controls. To this end, we conducted three Fast Periodic Visual Stimulation (FPVS) EEG experiments in a group of Berlin Police officers identified as SRs using the only existing formal diagnostic framework for lab-based SR identification (Ramon in Neuropsychologia 158:107809, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2021.107809 , 2021) that aligns with the seminal study of SRs (Russell et al. in Psychon Bull Rev 16(2):252-257, https://doi.org/10.3758/PBR.16.2.252 , 2009). These experiments aimed to isolate FIP from behavioral and general perceptual factors in terms of both the consistency and speed of face identity discrimination and categorization. Broadly, the results of all three experiments provided two key findings. First, whichever factors distinguish SRs from controls, they are not face-specific. Second, SRs are not all cut from the same cloth. Rather, the factors distinguishing SRs from controls seem to be individual-specific, warranting more nuanced and bespoke testing criteria for their deployment in practical applications.
“超级识别者”(SR)一词用于描述那些据称具有卓越面部识别能力的个体,但这一术语可能有点用词不当。就像盲人不会被视为面孔失认症患者一样,SR的诊断至少应强调面部身份处理(FIP)的特异性,如果不是特别强调识别的话。然而,SR往往是通过特定于面部的行为任务来诊断的,这些任务探究的是感知和/或识别,而其能力背后的神经基础和机制在很大程度上尚未得到探索。因此,本研究试图确定,在经过严格且可比诊断的SR样本中,是否存在任何常见的FIP子过程能够将他们与神经典型对照组区分开来。为此,我们对一组柏林警察进行了三项快速周期性视觉刺激(FPVS)脑电图实验,这些警察是使用唯一现有的基于实验室的SR识别正式诊断框架(拉蒙,《神经心理学》158:107809,https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2021.107809,2021年)被确定为SR的,该框架与SR的开创性研究(拉塞尔等人,《心理学通报与评论》16(2):252 - 257,https://doi.org/10.3758/PBR.16.2.252,2009年)一致。这些实验旨在从面部身份辨别和分类的一致性和速度方面,将FIP与行为和一般感知因素区分开来。总体而言,所有三项实验的结果提供了两个关键发现。第一,无论哪些因素将SR与对照组区分开来,它们都不是特定于面部的。第二,SR并非千篇一律。相反,将SR与对照组区分开来的因素似乎是因人而异的,这就需要在实际应用中为其部署制定更细致且定制化的测试标准。