linatet wrote:
I don't understand. Why is it there are people here saying it is not prosopagnosia? I experience it too and I always thought it was prosopagnosia. Why is it not?
Because as a psychology student you learn about prosopagnosia as being quite different than the inability to recognize someone. It's the inability to recognize a face as a face. The name of the article that stuck in my head when first learning about it was 'Man who mistook his wife's face for a hat' or something quite similar. Have you ever mistaken a person's face for an inanimate object? No? Then it's not prosopagnosia.
That said, I definitely understand why someone would think to call it prosopagnosia. One of the first things I recalled asking my aspie bf, when we was talking about not seeing the forest for the trees, was if he would describe the inability to see a forest as a type of agnosia.
Agnosia, in general, is the complete total inability to perceive things as wholes, despite having perfectly normal sensory input. So, for instance, someone who has an agnosia won't ever feel like something suddenly becomes too bright or loud or that they want to get away due to sensory overload like someone with ASD, or at least if they do it's not because of agnosia. The reason I bring this up is that, from what I can tell, sensory overload is likely caused by the same thing that causes this deficit in recognition as well as more attention to detail.
Importantly, as has already been said, in agnosia it's a consistent deficit that's always present, and is usually due to some sort of brain trauma. And it's far more severe and totally unfunctional compared to what people here have said.
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Not autistic, I think
Prone to depression
Have celiac disease
Poor motivation