Establishing when and how the human brain differentiates between object categories is key to understanding visual cognition. Event-related potential (ERP) investigations have led to the consensus that faces selectively elicit a negative wave peaking 170 ms after presentation, the 'N170'. In such experiments, however, faces are nearly always presented from a full front view, whereas other stimuli are more perceptually variable, leading to uncontrolled interstimulus perceptual variance (ISPV). Here, we compared ERPs elicited by faces, cars and butterflies while-for the first time-controlling ISPV (low or high). Surprisingly, the N170 was sensitive, not to object category, but to ISPV. In addition, we found category effects independent of ISPV...
AbstractHow fast are visual stimuli categorized as faces by the human brain? Because of their high t...
The N170 is an event-related potential component reported to be very sensitive to human face stimuli...
One major challenge in determining how the brain categorizes objects is to tease apart the contribut...
A recent event-related potential (ERP) study (Thierry G., Martin, C.D., Downing, P., Pegna, A.J. 200...
The human face is the most studied object category in visual neuroscience. In a quest for markers of...
The human face is the most studied object category in visual neuroscience. In a quest for markers of...
Numerous studies report a negative event-related potential at occipito-temporal scalp sites between ...
Event-related potential studies have identified the N170 as the key neurophysiological marker of hum...
Event-related potential (ERP) studies have highlighted an occipito-temporal potential, the N170, whi...
Human perception of faces is widely believed to rely on automatic processing by a domain-specifi c, ...
Neural adaptation paradigms have been used in the electrophysiological and neuroimaging literature t...
How fast are visual stimuli categorized as faces by the human brain? Because of their high temporal ...
Facial recognition is both essential and fundamental. In the brain the parietal-occipital stream con...
When faces appear in our visual environment we naturally attend to them, possibly to the detriment o...
International audienceVisual representations of faces are extracted shortly after 100 ms in the huma...
AbstractHow fast are visual stimuli categorized as faces by the human brain? Because of their high t...
The N170 is an event-related potential component reported to be very sensitive to human face stimuli...
One major challenge in determining how the brain categorizes objects is to tease apart the contribut...
A recent event-related potential (ERP) study (Thierry G., Martin, C.D., Downing, P., Pegna, A.J. 200...
The human face is the most studied object category in visual neuroscience. In a quest for markers of...
The human face is the most studied object category in visual neuroscience. In a quest for markers of...
Numerous studies report a negative event-related potential at occipito-temporal scalp sites between ...
Event-related potential studies have identified the N170 as the key neurophysiological marker of hum...
Event-related potential (ERP) studies have highlighted an occipito-temporal potential, the N170, whi...
Human perception of faces is widely believed to rely on automatic processing by a domain-specifi c, ...
Neural adaptation paradigms have been used in the electrophysiological and neuroimaging literature t...
How fast are visual stimuli categorized as faces by the human brain? Because of their high temporal ...
Facial recognition is both essential and fundamental. In the brain the parietal-occipital stream con...
When faces appear in our visual environment we naturally attend to them, possibly to the detriment o...
International audienceVisual representations of faces are extracted shortly after 100 ms in the huma...
AbstractHow fast are visual stimuli categorized as faces by the human brain? Because of their high t...
The N170 is an event-related potential component reported to be very sensitive to human face stimuli...
One major challenge in determining how the brain categorizes objects is to tease apart the contribut...