Readers react to a rare visual disorder, microplastics in arteries and more

Let’s face it

Scientists re-created the demonic distortions that a patient with prosopometamorphopsia, or PMO, sees when looking at faces, Anna Gibbs reported in “Here’s what faces can look like to people with a rare visual disorder” (SN: 4/20/24, p. 32).

Reader John Henderson asked whether research on facial blindness could help scientists better understand PMO.

The two disorders have been linked to similar regions in the brain, including the right occipital lobe and fusiform face area, says neurologist Jason Barton of the University of British Columbia in Vancouver. So studying one disorder could help illuminate the other.

.email-conversion { border: 1px solid #ffcccb; color:

→ Continue reading at Science News

More from author

Related posts

Advertisment

Latest posts

Celebrating the second law of thermodynamics

Nancy Shute is editor in chief of Science News Media Group. Previously, she was an editor at NPR and US News & World...

How to Avoid Getting Sick This Summer

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.As flowers bloom and temperatures climb, many are eager to get back outside....

Ukrainian Sailors Are Using Telegram to Avoid Being Tricked Into Smuggling Oil for Russia

This story originally appeared in Hakai Magazine and is part of the Climate Desk collaboration.A new video appears on the social media network Telegram:...