Human electrophysiological studies have found that the processing of faces and other objects differs reliably at approximately 150 ms after stimulus onset, faces giving rise to a larger occipitotemporal field potential on the scalp, termed the N170. We hypothesize that visual expertise with nonface objects leads to the recruitment of early face-related categorization processes in the occipitotemporal cortex, as reflected by the N170. To test this hypothesis, the N170 in response to laterally presented faces was measured while subjects concurrently viewed centrally presented, novel, nonface objects (asymmetric "Greebles"). The task was simply to report the side of the screen on which each face was presented. Five subjects were tested during ...
Human perception of faces is widely believed to rely on automatic processing by a domain-specifi c, ...
Scalp electrophysiological recordings in humans indicate that the processing of faces differs from o...
There is strong evidence that face processing is localized in the brain. The double dissociation bet...
Human electrophysiological studies have found that the processing of faces and other objects differs...
The degree of commonality between the perceptual mechanisms involved in processing faces and objects...
The degree of commonality between the perceptual mechanisms involved in processing faces and objects...
Scalp event-related potentials (ERPs) in humans indicate that face and object processing differ appr...
Abstract—Scalp event-related potentials (ERPs) in humans indicate that face and object processing di...
This research investigated how people respond to visual presentation of novel stimuli depicting fami...
Human adults have a rich visual experience with seeing human faces since birth, which may contribute...
peer reviewedHuman adults have a rich visual experience thanks to seeing human faces since birth, wh...
Some of the brain areas in the ventral temporal lobe, such as the fusiform face area (FFA), are crit...
Human face processing is an important and fascinating function. Recent neuroimaging studies of face ...
Facial recognition is both essential and fundamental. In the brain the parietal-occipital stream con...
Face perception depends on a network of brain areas that selectively respond to faces over non-face ...
Human perception of faces is widely believed to rely on automatic processing by a domain-specifi c, ...
Scalp electrophysiological recordings in humans indicate that the processing of faces differs from o...
There is strong evidence that face processing is localized in the brain. The double dissociation bet...
Human electrophysiological studies have found that the processing of faces and other objects differs...
The degree of commonality between the perceptual mechanisms involved in processing faces and objects...
The degree of commonality between the perceptual mechanisms involved in processing faces and objects...
Scalp event-related potentials (ERPs) in humans indicate that face and object processing differ appr...
Abstract—Scalp event-related potentials (ERPs) in humans indicate that face and object processing di...
This research investigated how people respond to visual presentation of novel stimuli depicting fami...
Human adults have a rich visual experience with seeing human faces since birth, which may contribute...
peer reviewedHuman adults have a rich visual experience thanks to seeing human faces since birth, wh...
Some of the brain areas in the ventral temporal lobe, such as the fusiform face area (FFA), are crit...
Human face processing is an important and fascinating function. Recent neuroimaging studies of face ...
Facial recognition is both essential and fundamental. In the brain the parietal-occipital stream con...
Face perception depends on a network of brain areas that selectively respond to faces over non-face ...
Human perception of faces is widely believed to rely on automatic processing by a domain-specifi c, ...
Scalp electrophysiological recordings in humans indicate that the processing of faces differs from o...
There is strong evidence that face processing is localized in the brain. The double dissociation bet...