A patient (MR) is reported who is able to correctly recognise famous people
as being familiar but has a strong tendency to falsely recognise unfamilia
r people as being familiar. False recognition does not depend on the type o
f person involved (contemporary, historical, fictional) or the modality in
which it is presented (face, spoken/written name). False recognition does n
ot extend to vocabulary knowledge, to other proper name categories (e.g. pl
aces) or to news events. Several hypotheses are considered but discounted.
False recognition does not reflect reliance on familiarity associated: with
parts of the stimuli as opposed to the whole. False recognition, instead,
depends critically on the nature of the referent (i.e. whether it refers to
a person or not) and not on the nature of the stimulus material. Thus, MR
will not produce false recognition when asked to search for names that refe
r to song or book titles even when, in all other respects, the stimuli rese
mble the names of people (e.g. Eleanor Rigby, David Copperfield). It is sug
gested that this disorder stems from a top-down failure to regulate the per
son recognition system, such that inappropriate information is retrieved. T
he category specificity may reflect inappropriate use of meta-memory knowle
dge concerning the rate of potential new exemplars from the category of "pe
ople" relative to other categories.