Characterizing the prevalence and nature of facial recognition deficits in non-proliferative diabetic retinopathy
University Of Oklahoma, Norman OK
Investigators
Abstract
Project summary/abstract Facial perception and memory are visual abilities that are driven by an interplay between low-level visual and higher-level cognitive functioning. Deï¬cits in facial perception and memory are associated with diminished quality of life and a range of social challenges, and it has been suggested that this functional deï¬cit may be an early marker for the later onset of structural abnormalities in a variety of conditions. One of these conditionsâone that has received scant attentionâis diabetic retinopathy. In a recent systematic review, difï¬culty in perceiving faces was noted as one of the greatest subjective restrictions on visual functioning. Diabetic retinopathy affects approx- imately one-third of individuals with diabetes world-wide. The vision loss associated with diabetic retinopathy is preventable, given early identiï¬cation, medical intervention and monitoring, and behavioral interventions. Diabetic retinopathy can be generally separated into two classes. The ï¬rst is non-proliferative diabetic retinopathy, which is characterized by micro-aneurysms, intraretinal hemorrhages, venous beading or intra-retinal microvascular ab- normalities. The second is proliferative diabetic retinopathy, which is characterized by retinal neovascularization. In cases of macular edema, there is a thickening of the macula which can result in the loss of central vision. Deï¬cits in face processing have been studied more frequently in two pathologies that affect the macula: age- related macular degeneration (AMD) and glaucomatous macular damage. Patients with AMD regularly identify facial processing as tasks with which they experience signiï¬cant difï¬culty. In the literature on AMD, deï¬cits in facial processing have been identiï¬ed as signiï¬cant components of quality of life. The magnitude of the deï¬cits in facial processing in AMD are such that they are second only to deï¬cits in reading in subjective complaints. Finally, it has been noted that deï¬cits in facial processsing are among the ï¬rst subjectively-reported symptoms of AMD, often occurring before the detection of structural abnormalities. With respect to deï¬cits in facial percep- tion and memory in glaucomatous macular damage, there is evidence that signiï¬cant impairments exist despite patients having good central visual acuity. In addition, the amount of the diffuse macular damage is signiï¬cantly related to impairments in contrast sensitivity and measures of facial recognition and identiï¬cation. It has been suggested that other related visual pathologiesâincluding diabetic retinopathyâshould show similar patterns of performance deï¬cits. However, very little work on this issue has been done in the case of diabetic retinopa- thy. The work proposed here represents an important ï¬rst step in addressing this need. The accomplishment of this work will result in the ï¬rst quantiï¬cation of the prevalence and severity of deï¬cits in facial processing in diabetic retinopathy, the ï¬rst analytic empirical treatment of the pathology-related differences in processing feat- ural and conï¬gural information, and the ï¬rst theoretical treatment of those differences. The novel application of two meta-theories using a new experimental design, along with a modeling approach capable of relating those meta-theories has the potential to be transformative in this domain.
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