Evan Accatino, Neuroscience, Fall 2021

Figure: Signs similar to this one have become increasingly prevalent over the past eighteen months. They show no sign of removal as the pandemic rages on and mask mandates are maintained in many parts of the country. 

Image Source: Wikimedia Commons

Undoubtedly, the widespread implementation of masking policies as a mitigation measure to slow the spread of COVID-19 has been an important step in the effort to improve the response against the pandemic and its many far-reaching impacts. The prominence of masks in everyday social interactions, however, seems to be having a far less positive impact on facial perception skills in interpersonal settings.

According to a study by Freud et al. (2020) of York University (Toronto, Canada), the newly introduced partial occlusion of faces has altered the mechanisms by which humans perceive and interpret the faces of those around them. Typical face perception is characterized by holistic processing; that is, the face is processed in the fusiform region of the temporal lobe as a whole, rather than as a compartmentalization of its different features. The three configural processes that define facial recognition are: perception of the relationship between facial components (eyes, nose, mouth), aggregation of these features to form an understanding of the face as a whole, and diversification of second-order relationships (processing two components of the face in relation to each other: the eyebrows and hairline, for example). Thus, covering up the lower portion of the face should cause a disruption in an individual’s holistic processing capabilities as the entire face cannot be analyzed (Freud et al., 2020).

As expected, the study by Freud et al. concluded, based on the evaluation of facial recognition capabilities (both unmasked and masked) for 496 adult observers, that masked faces were consistent with a significant decrease in performance. Facial holistic processing was also severely diminished for trials of masked faces, a finding that is consistent among individuals who are unable to recognize the faces of people familiar to them, traditionally a symptom of a condition known as prosopagnosia. This condition can be acquired after sustaining damage to the fusiform gyrus of the inferior temporal cortex (via stroke, head injury, etc.), or can be present from the time of an individual’s birth with an unknown neurological basis (Freud et al., 2020). In this instance, autosomal dominant inheritance of congenital prosopagnosia is thought to occur as a result of a mutation or deletion of the oxytocin receptor (OXTR) gene. And so, as masking becomes a more normalized part of the everyday lives of individuals, so too does the emergence of an apparent blindness to facial recognition.

The societal implications for the emergence of widespread face-blindness are innumerable. Altered performance in facial recognition experiments including partially obstructed faces could significantly affect social interactions, interpersonal communication, and the formation of long-standing connections with others. Prior studies examining the reduction in face recognition abilities in patients afflicted with age-related macular degeneration have found a strong correlation between a reduction in this ability and increased social disengagement, decreased interpersonal confidence, and an overall reduction in quality of life (Verfaillie, 2014). In the realm of education, specifically, these implications are particularly alarming, and may lead to a reduction in the student-teacher interpersonal relationships that are all too important for sustained educational prosperity.

References

Freud, E., Stajduhar, A., Rosenbaum, R. S., Avidan, G., & Ganel, T. (2020). The covid-19 pandemic masks the way people perceive faces. Nature News. Retrieved October 29, 2021, from https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-020-78986-9.

Verfaillie, K. (2014). Impaired holistic and analytic face processing in congenital prosopagnosia: Evidence from the eye-contingent mask/window paradigm. Taylor & Francis Online. Retrieved October 29, 2021, from https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13506285.2014.881446.