Face recognition ability inherited separately from IQ

Published March 2, 2010 by Archaeology Magazine

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — Recognizing faces is an important social skill, but not all of us are equally good at it. Some people are unable to recognize even their closest friends (a condition called prosopagnosia), while others have a near-photographic memory for large numbers of faces. Now a twin study by collaborators at MIT and in Beijing, China shows that face recognition is heritable, and that it is inherited separately from general intelligence or IQ.

Read more at http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2010-01/miot-fra011910.php

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