Portraits or People? Distinct Representations of Face Identity in the Human Visual Cortex

Humans can identify individual faces under different viewpoints, even after a single encounter. We determined brain regions responsible for processing face identity across view changes after variable delays with several intervening stimuli, using event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging d...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of cognitive neuroscience 2005-07, Vol.17 (7), p.1043-1057
Hauptverfasser: Pourtois, Gilles, Schwartz, Sophie, Seghier, Mohamed L., Lazeyras, François, Vuilleumier, Patrik
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container_end_page 1057
container_issue 7
container_start_page 1043
container_title Journal of cognitive neuroscience
container_volume 17
creator Pourtois, Gilles
Schwartz, Sophie
Seghier, Mohamed L.
Lazeyras, François
Vuilleumier, Patrik
description Humans can identify individual faces under different viewpoints, even after a single encounter. We determined brain regions responsible for processing face identity across view changes after variable delays with several intervening stimuli, using event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging during a long-term repetition priming paradigm. Unfamiliar faces were presented sequentially either in a frontal or three-quarter view. Each face identity was repeated once after an unpredictable lag, with either the same or another viewpoint. Behavioral data showed significant priming in response time, irrespective of view changes. Brain imaging results revealed a reduced response in the lateral occipital and fusiform cortex with face repetition. Bilateral face-selective fusiform areas showed view-sensitive repetition effects, generalizing only from three-quarter to front-views. More medial regions in the left (but not in the right) fusiform showed repetition effects across all types of viewpoint changes. These results reveal that distinct regions within the fusiform cortex hold view-sensitive or view-invariant traces of novel faces, and that face identity is represented in a view-sensitive manner in the functionally defined face-selective areas of both hemispheres. In addition, our finding of a better generalization after exposure to a 3/4-view than to a front-view demonstrates for the first time a neural substrate in the fusiform cortex for the common recognition advantage of three-quarter faces. This pattern provides new insights into the nature of face representation in the human visual system.
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source MEDLINE; MIT Press Journals
subjects Adult
Analysis of Variance
Anatomical correlates of behavior
Behavioral psychophysiology
Biological and medical sciences
Brain Mapping
Cognition & reasoning
Evoked Potentials - physiology
Eyes & eyesight
Face
Female
Functional Laterality - physiology
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Humans
Image Processing, Computer-Assisted - methods
Magnetic Resonance Imaging - methods
Male
Neurology
Oxygen - blood
Pattern Recognition, Visual - physiology
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychology. Psychophysiology
Time Factors
Visual Cortex - blood supply
Visual Cortex - physiology
title Portraits or People? Distinct Representations of Face Identity in the Human Visual Cortex
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