A surprising number of people can't recognize faces — sometimes even their own

young woman outside thinking looking at camera

(Unsplash/Alex Lambley)

  • Some people have a condition that makes it difficult for them to recognize familiar faces, even those of friends and family. Sometimes they may even have issues recognizing themselves. This is called prosopagnosia.

  • Prosopagnosia is estimated to affect about 1% of the population.

  • It's not necessarily linked to brain damage or any other intellectual problem; the prolific author and neurologist Oliver Sacks was a prosopagnosic.

  • Merriam-Webster added prosopagnosia to the dictionary earlier this week.

I've seen a lot of faces that I can't forget.

No, I'm not talking about being in love, as The Beatles lyrics might imply. Instead, I may be a super-recognizer, meaning that other peoples' faces get strangely seared into my brain — even those of complete strangers. It's not that I necessarily want to remember them — I just can't seem to help it.

And I'm not alone. Josh P. Davis, a psychology professor at the University of Greenwich in England who studies the phenomenon, told me he estimates some 1% of the population could qualify as super-recognizers. (Keep in mind, Davis said — "if you do very well then you may be a super-recognizer" — if you want to know for sure, you can inquire with his team about additional testing.)

But it turns out that another 1% of the population appears to fall into a category that might be best-described as the opposite of super-recognition.

These face-blind people, or "prosopagnosics," a term that neuroscientists have used to refer to them for several years but was only officially added to the Merriam-Webster dictionary this month, essentially cannot recognize familiar faces.

'Prosopagnosia' is essentially face blindness

The word prosopagnosia, which combines the Greek words "prosopon," or face, with "agnos," or lack of knowledge, dates back to when researchers first identified the "condition" in people with brain damage to a specific area of the brain called the fusiform face area, or FFA, about 30 years ago. Scientists believe the FFA is thought to play a key role in our ability to identify a face.

Prosopagnosics, they found, had severe difficulties recognizing familiar faces — even, sometimes, their own.

Oliver Sacks

(Neurologist Dr. Oliver Sacks.Chris McGrath/Getty Images)

But you don't have to have experienced brain damage to have prosopagnosia.

More recently, researchers have diagnosed the condition in perfectly healthy people who appear to be born with it. The deficit, called "developmental prosopagnosia," doesn't appear to negatively affect other intellectual efforts in these people.