Prosopagnosia Brain Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 11 famous quotes about Prosopagnosia Brain with everyone.
Top Prosopagnosia Brain Quotes

The Self alone exists. When you try to trace the ego, which is the basis of the perception of the world and everything else, you find the ego does not exist at all and neither does all this creation that you see. — Ramana Maharshi

I will give you all of me, the good, the bad, and the broken parts because I know you make me better. You make me whole again. — Brittainy C. Cherry

I doubt I'm more secure than Meryl Streep. I guess actors just never feel secure. — Zoe Lister-Jones

I definitely think there is a shift happening right now in terms of visibility, but there's still a choice you make as a public figure on what to do or how to present your sexuality. — Evan Rachel Wood

I went on a long trip through South America with Prince Charles where I was the only journalist there - a couple of photographers but no other writers. — Anthony Holden

I don't want to take somebody else's beating. That makes me unhappy. — Jack Kirby

I got a feeling I had loads when I was in primary school, 'cause I had red hair; you know, like Duracell. — Richard D. James

I think it was Elisabeth Shue who said that if you start a movie with a woman seen through a man's eyes, that woman is objectified by him throughout. — Sam Taylor-Johnson

Just because your aren't perfect, doesn't mean you aren't beautiful. — Zayn Malik

People with a condition called prosopagnosia cannot distinguish between familiar and unfamiliar faces. They rely entirely on cues such as hairlines, gait, and voices to recognize people they know. Pondering this condition led researchers Daniel Tranel and Antonio Damasio to try something clever: even though prosopagnosics cannot consciously recognize faces, would they have a measurable skin conductance response to faces that were familiar? Indeed, they did. Even though the prosopagnosic truly insists on being unable to recognize faces, some part of his brain can (and does) distinguish familiar faces from unfamiliar ones. — David Eagleman