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Personal Injury Lawyer Santa Barbara


Their sight works just fine, but something in their brains works differently. They have trouble recognizing anyone, even themselves. The face in the mirror is unfamiliar. They bring their children to daycare in the morning but don’t recognize them in the afternoon if they’ve changed T-shirts. They walk past coworkers on the street without saying hello because one face looks pretty much like the next. It’s socially awkward, professionally damaging and potentially isolating. They are mistaken for being rude, standoffish or conceited, when what they really are is unable to recognize human faces.

It’s called prosopagnosia — “face blindness” — and one of the leading researchers in the field is Dr. Brad Duchaine, a 1994 Marquette University graduate who grew up in Neenah. Now an associate professor of psychology at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire, where he lives with his wife and two daughters, Duchaine is recognized internationally as a top prosopagnosia expert. His research is prominent in academic journals and has been highlighted in The New York Times, the Sunday Times, The Guardian, The Washington Post, The New Yorker, and on NPR and "60 Minutes," among other media outlets. Internationally some “20 to 25 labs are working on face processing,” says Duchaine, and his work is on the forefront of the relatively young field (the first medical paper on the issue didn’t appear until 1955).

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