Humans can identify individual faces under different viewpoints, even after a single encounter. We determined brain regions responsible for processing face identity across view changes after variable delays with several intervening stimuli, using event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging during a long-term repetition priming paradigm. Unfamiliar faces were presented sequentially either in a frontal or three-quarter view. Each face identity was repeated once after an unpredictable lag, with either the same or another viewpoint. Behavioral data showed significant priming in response time, irrespective of view changes. Brain imaging results revealed a reduced response in the lateral occipital and fusiform cortex with face repetition....
<div><p>Different kinds of known faces activate brain areas to dissimilar degrees. However, the tuni...
Two regions in the occipito-temporal cortex respond more strongly to faces than to objects and are t...
Different kinds of known faces activate brain areas to dissimilar degrees. However, the tuning to ty...
Humans can identify individual faces under different view- viewpoints, even after a single encounter...
Face recognition is a unique visual skill enabling us to recognize a large number of person identiti...
The occipital face area (OFA) is face-selective. This enhanced activation to faces could reflect eit...
Face recognition is a complex cognitive process that requires distinguishable neuronal representatio...
Identifying the faces of familiar persons requires the ability to assign several different images of...
We examined how the perception of face identity was influenced by prior exposure to a different face...
How the brain represents different aspects of faces remains controversial. Here we presented subject...
Controversy surrounds the proposal that specific human cortical regions in the ventral occipitotempo...
An unresolved goal in face perception is to identify brain areas involved in face processing and sim...
An unresolved goal in face perception is to identify brain areas involved in face processing and sim...
Visual face identification requires distinguishing between thousands of faces we know. This computat...
Identity and facial expression of faces we interact with are represented as invariant and changeable...
<div><p>Different kinds of known faces activate brain areas to dissimilar degrees. However, the tuni...
Two regions in the occipito-temporal cortex respond more strongly to faces than to objects and are t...
Different kinds of known faces activate brain areas to dissimilar degrees. However, the tuning to ty...
Humans can identify individual faces under different view- viewpoints, even after a single encounter...
Face recognition is a unique visual skill enabling us to recognize a large number of person identiti...
The occipital face area (OFA) is face-selective. This enhanced activation to faces could reflect eit...
Face recognition is a complex cognitive process that requires distinguishable neuronal representatio...
Identifying the faces of familiar persons requires the ability to assign several different images of...
We examined how the perception of face identity was influenced by prior exposure to a different face...
How the brain represents different aspects of faces remains controversial. Here we presented subject...
Controversy surrounds the proposal that specific human cortical regions in the ventral occipitotempo...
An unresolved goal in face perception is to identify brain areas involved in face processing and sim...
An unresolved goal in face perception is to identify brain areas involved in face processing and sim...
Visual face identification requires distinguishing between thousands of faces we know. This computat...
Identity and facial expression of faces we interact with are represented as invariant and changeable...
<div><p>Different kinds of known faces activate brain areas to dissimilar degrees. However, the tuni...
Two regions in the occipito-temporal cortex respond more strongly to faces than to objects and are t...
Different kinds of known faces activate brain areas to dissimilar degrees. However, the tuning to ty...