We investigated how face-selective cortical areas process configural and componential face information and how race of faces may influence these processes. Participants saw blurred (preserving configural information), scrambled (preserving componential information), and whole faces during fMRI scan, and performed a post-scan face recognition task using blurred or scrambled faces. The fusiform face area (FFA) showed stronger activation to blurred than to scrambled faces, and equivalent responses to blurred and whole faces. The occipital face area (OFA) showed stronger activation to whole than to blurred faces, which elicited similar responses to scrambled faces. Therefore, the FFA may be more tuned to process configural than componential inf...
Across many different races, people are better at recognizing own-race faces than faces from other r...
Two regions in the human occipito-temporal cortex respond preferentially to faces: 'the fusiform fac...
peer reviewedTwo regions in the human occipito-temporal cortex respond preferentially to faces: 'the...
We investigated how face-selective cortical areas process configural and componential face informati...
Poster no. 1071INTRODUCTION: We studied the degree to which face-selective regions FFA, OFA, and STS...
Own-race faces are recognized more effectively than other-race faces. This phenomenon is referred to...
<p>Own-race faces are recognized more effectively than other-race faces. This phenomenon is referred...
We explored the processing mechanisms of featural and configural face information using event-relate...
A great challenge to the field of visual neuroscience is to understand how faces are encoded and rep...
Face processing relies on a distributed, patchy network of cortical regions in the temporal and fron...
Several regions of the human brain respond more strongly to faces than to other visual stimuli, such...
A whole network of brain areas showing larger response to faces than other visual stimuli has been i...
Two regions in the occipito-temporal cortex respond more strongly to faces than to objects and are t...
A number of human brain areas showing a larger response to faces than to objects from different cate...
fMRI studies have reported three regions in human ventral visual cortex that respond selectively to ...
Across many different races, people are better at recognizing own-race faces than faces from other r...
Two regions in the human occipito-temporal cortex respond preferentially to faces: 'the fusiform fac...
peer reviewedTwo regions in the human occipito-temporal cortex respond preferentially to faces: 'the...
We investigated how face-selective cortical areas process configural and componential face informati...
Poster no. 1071INTRODUCTION: We studied the degree to which face-selective regions FFA, OFA, and STS...
Own-race faces are recognized more effectively than other-race faces. This phenomenon is referred to...
<p>Own-race faces are recognized more effectively than other-race faces. This phenomenon is referred...
We explored the processing mechanisms of featural and configural face information using event-relate...
A great challenge to the field of visual neuroscience is to understand how faces are encoded and rep...
Face processing relies on a distributed, patchy network of cortical regions in the temporal and fron...
Several regions of the human brain respond more strongly to faces than to other visual stimuli, such...
A whole network of brain areas showing larger response to faces than other visual stimuli has been i...
Two regions in the occipito-temporal cortex respond more strongly to faces than to objects and are t...
A number of human brain areas showing a larger response to faces than to objects from different cate...
fMRI studies have reported three regions in human ventral visual cortex that respond selectively to ...
Across many different races, people are better at recognizing own-race faces than faces from other r...
Two regions in the human occipito-temporal cortex respond preferentially to faces: 'the fusiform fac...
peer reviewedTwo regions in the human occipito-temporal cortex respond preferentially to faces: 'the...