-
The Cure guitarist and keyboard player Perry Bamonte dies aged 65
-
Draper to miss Australian Open
-
Police arrest suspect after man stabs 3 women in Paris metro
-
Former Montpellier coach Gasset dies at 72
-
Trump's Christmas gospel: bombs, blessings and blame
-
Russia lashes out at Zelensky ahead of new Trump meeting on Ukraine plan
-
Salah helps Egypt beat South Africa and book last-16 place
-
Australia's Ikitau facing lengthy lay-off after shoulder injury
-
Another 1,100 refugees cross into Mauritania from Mali: UN
-
Guardiola proud of Man City players' response to weighty issues
-
Deadly blast hits mosque in Alawite area of Syria's Homs
-
The Jukebox Man on song as Redknapp records 'dream' King George win
-
Liverpool boss Slot says Ekitike reaping rewards for greater physicality
-
Judge jails ex-Malaysian PM Najib for 15 more years after new graft conviction
-
Musona rescues Zimbabwe in AFCON draw with Angola
-
Zelensky to meet Trump in Florida on Sunday
-
'Personality' the key for Celtic boss Nancy when it comes to new signings
-
Arteta eager to avoid repeat of Rice red card against Brighton
-
Nigeria signals more strikes likely in 'joint' US operations
-
Malaysia's former PM Najib convicted in 1MDB graft trial
-
Elusive wild cat feared extinct rediscovered in Thailand
-
Japan govt approves record budget, including for defence
-
Seoul to ease access to North Korean newspaper
-
History-maker Tongue wants more of the same from England attack
-
Australia lead England by 46 after 20 wickets fall on crazy day at MCG
-
Asia markets edge up as precious metals surge
-
Twenty wickets fall on day one as Australia gain edge in 4th Ashes Test
-
'No winner': Kosovo snap poll unlikely to end damaging deadlock
-
Culture being strangled by Kosovo's political crisis
-
Main contenders in Kosovo's snap election
-
Australia all out for 152 as England take charge of 4th Ashes Test
-
Boys recount 'torment' at hands of armed rebels in DR Congo
-
Inside Chernobyl, Ukraine scrambles to repair radiation shield
-
Bondi victims honoured as Sydney-Hobart race sets sail
-
North Korea's Kim orders factories to make more missiles in 2026
-
Palladino's Atalanta on the up as Serie A leaders Inter visit
-
Hooked on the claw: how crane games conquered Japan's arcades
-
Shanghai's elderly waltz back to the past at lunchtime dance halls
-
Japan govt approves record 122 trillion yen budget
-
US launches Christmas Day strikes on IS targets in Nigeria
-
Australia reeling on 72-4 at lunch as England strike in 4th Ashes Test
-
Too hot to handle? Searing heat looming over 2026 World Cup
-
Packers clinch NFL playoff spot as Lions lose to Vikings
-
Guinea's presidential candidates hold final rallies before Sunday's vote
-
TGI Solar Power Group Inc. and Genesys Info X Announce Strategic Partnership to Launch FUSED88.com, a Next-Generation AI & ASI Driven Management Platform
-
When Capital Risk Disappears: The New Valuation Lens for SMX
-
President Trump's Executive Marijuana Action Exposes the Truth-How the DEA Delayed Medicine While Protecting Everything Else
-
Calvin B. Taylor Bankshares, Inc. Reports Third Quarter Financial Results and Announces New Stock Repurchase Program
-
Processa Pharmaceuticals and 60 Degrees Pharmaceuticals Interviews to Air on the RedChip Small Stocks, Big Money(TM) Show on Bloomberg TV
-
Aptevo Therapeutics Announces 1-for-18 Reverse Stock Split
'I woke up in a demon world': How condition makes faces look distorted
When Victor Sharrah woke up one morning he was shocked to see that his housemate suddenly had pointed ears, gigantic eyes and a slashed mouth that stretched to the edges of his face.
Trying to remain calm, Sharrah took his dog for a walk, only to be met by people on the street who had similarly strange, twisted faces.
"My first thought was that I woke up in a demon world," Sharrah told AFP in a phone call from his home in Clarksville, Tennessee.
"I really started freaking out," the 58-year-old chef said. He considered getting himself "committed to the psych ward".
But Sharrah had not "totally lost his mind", as he feared.
He suffers from an extremely rare visual condition called prosopometamorphopsia -- or PMO for short.
For people with this condition, faces appear distorted in a variety of ways. While Sharrah sees demons, some see elves, PMO researcher Antonio Mello told AFP.
For some patients, one half of a face droops below the other. Others see purple or green faces, or ones constantly in motion.
Sometimes the condition only lasts a few days. But more than three years after waking to that scary first morning in November 2020, Sharrah still sees "demons".
- 'Traumatic' -
One aspect of Sharrah's condition makes him unique.
Unlike other people with PMO, when he sees faces on flat screens they appear normal.
This allowed Mello and other researchers at Dartmouth College in the US to create the first "photo-realistic" images representing how people with PMO see faces, they said in research published in The Lancet on Friday.
To create the images, the researchers had Sharrah compare photos of Mello and another person diplayed on a computer screen with the distortions he could see on their real-life faces.
For other PMO patients, the faces on the photos would have also appeared distorted, making such a comparison difficult.
Sharrah said that life with PMO is "far more traumatic than the pictures can convey".
"What people don't understand when they see those pictures is that in real life that face is moving -- gesturing and talking."
The exact cause of prosopometamorphopsia remains unknown.
Jason Barton, a neurologist at the University of British Columbia not involved in the new study, said that PMO is a "symptom, not a disorder," so could have multiple causes.
In most cases Barton has researched, "something happened in the brain that correlated with the onset of this abnormal experience", he told AFP.
Sharrah does have a lesion in his brain from an injury he suffered while working as a long-haul trucker in 2007.
But Mello said he did not believe this was related to PMO, because MRI scans showed the lesion is on Sharrah's hippocampus, a part of the brain "not associated with the face processing network".
Only around 75 cases of PMO have been previously reported in scientific literature.
But Mello said that more than 70 patients have contacted his lab over the last three years alone.
The terrifying nature of the condition mean it has often been misdiagnosed as schizophrenia or psychosis, he added.
- Adapting to demon world -
Sharrah only learned about PMO after posting about his experience on an online support group for people with bipolar disorder.
It was a huge relief.
"It meant I wasn't psychotic, you know?" he said.
Sharrah, who has perfect vision, had glasses custom made with a green tint that decreases the extremity of the distortions. Red makes them "more intense," he said.
As well as colour, depth perception seems to play a role. Though Sharrah does not see face distortions on flat screens, they started to appear when the researchers had him wear a virtual reality headset, Mello said.
Sharrah said he has largely adapted to his strange new world, and no longer wears his green glasses.
"It's been three years, I've kind of gotten used to it," he said.
But in crowded places such as Walmart, the army of demons around him can still be "overwhelming", he added.
Because PMO patients know what they are seeing is not real, many face a difficult decision. Is it worth telling people how grotesque they look, at the risk of sounding crazy?
Some choose silence. Mello spoke of a man who has never told his wife of many years that her face now appears distorted to him.
Sharrah said he shared his experience so that other people with PMO could avoid getting "institutionalised for psychosis".
"So they know what's going on -- and don't experience the trauma that I went through."
L.Mason--AMWN