Unable to recognize voices, unless it's Sean Connery

Posted on Tuesday, November 18, 2008 3:11 PM PT

By Brian Alexander

For as long as she could remember a 60-year-old British woman, known only as KH, has been unable to recognize voices, not even the voice of her own daughter. Unless she sees the face of the person speaking, she often has no idea who is talking to her. If her daughter calls on the phone, or an unseen colleague from work says something to her, it’s as if she’s hearing the voice for the first time.

Image: Body Odd

Except when Sean Connery speaks.

KH didn’t know what caused her problem until a few years ago when she read a magazine article about a neurological defect which makes it extremely difficult for people to recognize faces — a condition called prosopagnosia, or face blindness. She wondered if there could be some connection to her experiences. Hoping the doctors might solve her own mystery, she contacted prosopagnosia researcher Dr. Brad Duchaine at University College London.

“She thought she had a vocal [version of] prosopagnosia,” Duchaine said in an interview. “But we had never done anything involving voices. So we ran her through some face tests, some voice tests, and we could see she was on the level.”

An MRI showed no obvious structural defects or injuries. So Duchaine and colleague Lucia Garrido of UCL’s Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience created a series of more complex tasks to more thoroughly test KH’s ability to recognize faces, voices, emotions, music and overall perception of speech.

Duchaine and Garrido exposed KH to the voices of famous people with distinctive voices. Actress Joanna Lumley (known best in the U.S. for her role in the British comedy series “Absolutely Fabulous”), former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher, and David Beckham were easily tagged by a group of people participating in the research, although none of them rang a bell for KH.

Only one of the voices perked up her ears with recognition: the unmistakable Scottish burr of actor Sean Connery, the original James Bond.

“His accent is distinctive,” Duchaine explained. “And she is a British woman in her sixties…let’s say it’s probable he got her attention.”

Eventually Duchaine and his colleagues realized KH was the first documented case of someone born without the ability to detect familiar voices. Doctors do sometimes see this condition called phonagnosia typically in the aftermath of a stroke when brain damage affects auditory perception. Developmental phonagnosia, however, is an inborn defect whose cause is still unknown.

To learn more about the condition, Duchaine is conducting further research with KH. The scientists will use specialized scans to compare her brain while listening to voices with those of normal subjects to see which areas of brain are stimulated -- or not, in her case. But based on his work with prosopagnosia, in which few, if any, differences can be seen, he doubts his team will find much.

As for KH, her neurological defect has not prevented her from leading a highly successful professional life, although she has had to adopt several coping mechanisms.

For example, she must make rigid appointments to receive telephone calls so that if the phone rings at, say, 7 p.m., she knows who will be on the other end. And there have been embarrassing social encounters, like the time a former boss spoke to her while standing behind a couch where KH was sitting. Because she didn’t turn to acknowledge him, he thought he was being snubbed.

Duchaine has issued a call for any others who think they might be phonagnosic and invites them to contact him through a Web site, www.faceblind.org. So far, he says, five or six people have called. He expects to finds that developmental phonagnosia may not be all that uncommon. In comparison, developmental face blindness appeared to be very rare ten years ago, but it’s now known that many people cope with it.

“We hope that studies with KH's condition will help us better understand a range of issues related to voice recognition,” says Duchaine. “Developmental prosopagnosia has helped us understand the cognitive, neural, and genetic basis of face recognition, and voice agnosia could do the same for voice recognition.”

The research could help not only people like KH, but others who have problems understanding voices due to other kinds of developmental issues or brain damage.

More on neuroscience  |  Sean Connery

Comments

I have had trouble remembering different people's names when I visit with them. It's very embarrasing and I don't always want to say,I'm sorry, I don't remember your name, especially if I've actually known them for years. I've been told I have something called "white matter" in the front of my brain, but I have an IQ of 177. Can't figure why I have a short term memory loss unless it is because I was hit with a croquet mallet when I was little.
The name's ????, james ????
hey .. what were we talking about yesterday ... SEXY! hahah
Barbara from Or- Help around the WHAT, just joking you know your husband wanted to say that so I did it for him, its a man deal, just don't tell my wife
Surely England has caller I.D.!!!!
Maggie, I have the same problem with picturing people. I can only remember what people look like if I visualize an actual photograph I've seen of them.
To Maggie et.al.

Oliver Sacks studied a man who was unable to recognize faces. He wrote about it in a book called "The Man who Mistook His Wife for a Hat".

Also, the most wonderful neurologist working today is Villanaur Ramachandran. Search youtube for "Ramachandran" and he'll come up. He has worked with people who see sound and hear colors and all sorts of people whose neurological makeup is a bit different from the norm
You'll are all funny!  My symptoms are not wanting to hear the BS from unwanted callers like telemarketers or bill collectors!!  lol(:
The lady from the article doesn't have the auditory form of prosopagnosia.  In prosopagnosia, the person can't recognize ANY faces at all.  It is very intersting that she can recognize a single voice.  By the way, my wife also has spouseignoritis.
nahhh, that is called SELECTIVE HEARING.... women and men only listen to what they want! Works both ways! LOL
I am very bad about forming people's faces in my mind's eye.  I have often thought that if I were ever called upon to help with a police sketch, I would be utterly worthless to them.  Working in retail, this can be an enormous problem, I go to see if we have something in the back, and then I can't figure out who I was talking to.  I'm good at recognizing well known people to me, good friends and family, but even old friends that I once knew relatively well but have not seen for 5+ years often stump me.  It's embarrassing.
"she must make rigid appointments to receive telephone calls so that if the phone rings at, say, 7 p.m., she knows who will be on the other end."
Don't they have caller ID? Or when they answer the phone say, "May I ask who's calling?"
Maggie, you are not the only one.  I can not visualize faces either.  But it in not only faces, I have a hard time "seeing" anything in my minds eye.  I have always thought that I am just not visual.
Wow!  It must be related to that male affliction where they aren't able to see a sink load of dirty dishes or an underwear covered floor.
This is for Maggie, in Wingham Connecticut, I too forget faces in my mind usually ones I haven't seen in a while, but people I know well, (not close family members) I don't recall it happening recently but It has happened and always perplexes me when it does, sounds a little like Prosopagnosia as mentioned in the article.
PROOF! That Sean Connery is God.
come on...what a joke..i dont buy into any of this story....total insanity if anybody believes something like this. wait,wait..what did i just say??


tom,phoenix az
Hey Maggie (Windham, CT)...what do you think happened to change you perception?
i cannot believe that anyone would not be able to recognize Arnold Schwarzenegger's voice
I was a former guesht there
Sean Connery's voice is recognized by most women
from 20-90 years of age. Now that is a voice that
could talk to ya!!!
Hi Maggie from Wingham, CT,

I think that is called Agnosia - it is when you cannot identify an object or a person. I have a young relative with that problem but he is really good at describing the object he has trouble identifying...
Maggie:
I'm 25 and I've never had that ability, although I'm quite good at recognizing faces when I see them.
"Hspace" is your friend, folks...
Maggie from Windham, my mind works in a somewhat similar way.  I remember being at camp as a child and after a week being unable to picture in my mind what my mother's face looked like.  I recognize folks just fine but building mental images, especially of faces, has always been difficult for me.
Maggie- usually you specifically DON'T remember the faces of those closest to you because when you love someone you really look at their face.  It's those who you know superficially whose faces one tends to remember.  Don't know if that will help you, but something to think about.
Maggie from Windham,
My ability to recall faces is right there with yours.  I almost recognize a face I've seen before (even if I can't usually put a name to it), but if you ask me to remember what a given person's face looks like-- even if I've just seen that person-- I'm hopeless.  Without photographs, I'd even forget my late wife's face.
 Maggie, I also have the same problem.  The only way I can remember faces is if I remember a specific memory with them, like seeing them in a room, and I would remember the surroundings of the room and then I would remember them too, as part of the surroundings, but otherwise, I cannot simply conjure a picture of them in my mind.  I can recognize them and I remember prominent things like hair color and shape of face, but otherwise I really can't remember their faces.  Also, when I mentally see someone, I don't see them with braces, even if they do have them and I'm aware that they have them.
 I described this to my best friend because I thought it was normal, but apparently it's not.
I drive my husband nuts with the phase, "he reminds me of...."  everyone reminds me of someone else, and he can never see it.  As far as hearing goes, we've noticed being in our 40's means, even if you heard it, you don't remember you did!
Bill in Swanton: My story is exactly like yours. I can remember a phone number the very first time I use it. All I have to do is tell myself to remember it. I could never remember names at all. Then I got a job in sales.  I was horrified I wouldn't remember any names. Well, I was in for a surprise. When I met 1,2, or even 3 people I would say their name outloud and tell myself to remember the name. It worked. Just telling yourself to remember seems to do the trick.  Try it!
I feel dumber than a trout biting down on a rubber
cricket. does any one know who utter that statement in a commercial any guesses?
It was pleasant to me.
Sometimes it's really that simple, isn't it? I feel a little stupid for not thinking of this myself/earlier, though.


Send a comment

PLEASE READ: All comments must be approved before appearing in the thread; time and space constraints prevent all comments from appearing. We will only approve comments that are directly related to the blog, use appropriate language and are not attacking the comments of others.

Message (please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):

Your name, city and state (John Doe, Seattle, Wash.): 

Your e-mail address (jdoe@msnbc.com):

Your website (it's okay if you don't have one):

Remember me? (We'll keep it private)

About the blog

Insights and ruminations on the strangeness of all things medical, pharmaceutical and biological.

Msnbc.com writers and editors will muse upon the wonderfully weird human body and the medical curiosities that make you go huh, ewww or ouch! Looking for informed, unhinged meditations on everything from dubious diseases to recipes for ersatz mucous? Well, this is the place.

If you have a question, e-mail The Body Odd.

Archives


Add this blog to your news reader