Objects constitute the fundamental currency of our consciousness: they are the things that we perceive, remember and think about. One of the most important objects for a primate is a face. Research on the macaque face patch system in recent years has given us a remarkable window into the detailed processes underlying object recognition. Here, we review the macaque face patch system, including its anatomical organization, coding principles, role in behaviour and interactions with other brain regions. We highlight not only how it constitutes an archetypal object recognition system but also how it may provide a key to understanding mechanisms for higher cognitive function
The ability of primates to effortlessly recognize faces has been attributed to the existence of spec...
The brain processes objects through a series of regions along the ventral visual pathway, but the ci...
Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, 2...
The macaque brain contains a set of regions that show stronger fMRI activation to faces than other c...
Cognitive-psychological and neuropsychological studies suggest that the human brain processes facial...
How are different object categories organized by the visual system? Current evidence indicates that ...
Faces transmit a wealth of social information. How this information is exchanged between face-proces...
An essential characteristic of primates is social cognition. Social cognition is an evolutionary res...
Faces transmit a wealth of social information. How this information is exchanged between face-proces...
The neural circuits underlying face recognition provide a model for understanding visual object repr...
Face recognition is of central importance for primate social behavior. In both humans and macaques, ...
Converging reports indicate that face images are processed through specialized neural networks in th...
Faces transmit a wealth of social information. How this information is exchanged between face-proces...
Face recognition is highly proficient in humans and other social primates; it emerges in infancy, bu...
SummaryFacial motion transmits rich and ethologically vital information [1, 2], but how the brain in...
The ability of primates to effortlessly recognize faces has been attributed to the existence of spec...
The brain processes objects through a series of regions along the ventral visual pathway, but the ci...
Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, 2...
The macaque brain contains a set of regions that show stronger fMRI activation to faces than other c...
Cognitive-psychological and neuropsychological studies suggest that the human brain processes facial...
How are different object categories organized by the visual system? Current evidence indicates that ...
Faces transmit a wealth of social information. How this information is exchanged between face-proces...
An essential characteristic of primates is social cognition. Social cognition is an evolutionary res...
Faces transmit a wealth of social information. How this information is exchanged between face-proces...
The neural circuits underlying face recognition provide a model for understanding visual object repr...
Face recognition is of central importance for primate social behavior. In both humans and macaques, ...
Converging reports indicate that face images are processed through specialized neural networks in th...
Faces transmit a wealth of social information. How this information is exchanged between face-proces...
Face recognition is highly proficient in humans and other social primates; it emerges in infancy, bu...
SummaryFacial motion transmits rich and ethologically vital information [1, 2], but how the brain in...
The ability of primates to effortlessly recognize faces has been attributed to the existence of spec...
The brain processes objects through a series of regions along the ventral visual pathway, but the ci...
Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, 2...