Event-related potential (ERP) studies of the human brain have shown that object categories can be reliably distinguished as early as 130-170 ms on the surface of occipito-temporal cortex, peaking at the level of the N170 component. Consistent with this finding, neuropsychological and neuroimaging studies suggest major functional distinctions within the human object recognition system, particularly in hemispheric advantage, between the processing of words (left), faces (right), and objects (bilateral). Given these observations, our aim was to (1) characterize the differential response properties of the N170 to pictures of faces, objects, and words across hemispheres; and (2) test whether an effect of inversion for highly familiar and monoori...
This set of three experiments assessed the influence of different psychophysical factors on the late...
Abstract—Scalp event-related potentials (ERPs) in humans indicate that face and object processing di...
High-level visual object processing is often assumed to be largely position-independent. Here we dem...
Face processing Word processing Event-related potentials a b s t r a c t The adult human brain would...
The adult human brain would appear to have specialized and independent neural systems for the visual...
The specificity of face perception is thought to reside both in its dramatic vulnerability to pictur...
The ventral visual cortex houses a hierarchical system for object processing and exhibits category-s...
The specificity of face perception is thought to reside both in its dramatic vulnerability to pictur...
The properties of the face-sensitive N170 component of the event-related brain potential (ERP) were ...
N170 event-related potential (ERP) responses to both faces and visual words raises questions about c...
Scalp event-related potentials (ERPs) in humans indicate that face and object processing differ appr...
Behavioral studies have shown that picture-plane inversion impacts face and object recognition diffe...
Behavioral studies have shown that picture-plane inversion impacts face and object recognition diffe...
The N170 is an occipito-temporal visual event-related potential that is larger in response to faces ...
Event-related potential studies have identified the N170 as the key neurophysiological marker of hum...
This set of three experiments assessed the influence of different psychophysical factors on the late...
Abstract—Scalp event-related potentials (ERPs) in humans indicate that face and object processing di...
High-level visual object processing is often assumed to be largely position-independent. Here we dem...
Face processing Word processing Event-related potentials a b s t r a c t The adult human brain would...
The adult human brain would appear to have specialized and independent neural systems for the visual...
The specificity of face perception is thought to reside both in its dramatic vulnerability to pictur...
The ventral visual cortex houses a hierarchical system for object processing and exhibits category-s...
The specificity of face perception is thought to reside both in its dramatic vulnerability to pictur...
The properties of the face-sensitive N170 component of the event-related brain potential (ERP) were ...
N170 event-related potential (ERP) responses to both faces and visual words raises questions about c...
Scalp event-related potentials (ERPs) in humans indicate that face and object processing differ appr...
Behavioral studies have shown that picture-plane inversion impacts face and object recognition diffe...
Behavioral studies have shown that picture-plane inversion impacts face and object recognition diffe...
The N170 is an occipito-temporal visual event-related potential that is larger in response to faces ...
Event-related potential studies have identified the N170 as the key neurophysiological marker of hum...
This set of three experiments assessed the influence of different psychophysical factors on the late...
Abstract—Scalp event-related potentials (ERPs) in humans indicate that face and object processing di...
High-level visual object processing is often assumed to be largely position-independent. Here we dem...