Acquired disorders of face processing have long played an important
role in our theorizing about how the brain encodes and matches faces to
memory, because functional deficits in some, but not other aspects of face
processing, reveal whether different processes operate independently. One
striking dissociation is between the processing of face identity and
facial emotion, which suggests that these two forms of information are, to
some extent, processed independently. However, such dissociations can be
over-interpreted; though identity and emotion processing can dissociate,
the two processes could also rely on many common operations. To understand
how facial identity and emotion are computed, we need to assess in more
detail the nature of their breakdown in patients.