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Electrophysiological studies of human face perception III: effects of top-down processing on face-specific potentials
List of Titles
Electrophysiological studies of human face perception III: effects of top-down processing on face-specific potentials
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.3/210330
- Title
- Electrophysiological studies of human face perception III: effects of top-down processing on face-specific potentials
- Author(s)
- Puce, Aina; Allison, Truett; McCarthy, Gregory
- Abstract
- This is the last in a series of papers dealing with intracranial event- related potential (ERP) correlates of face perception. Here we describe the results of manipulations that may exert top-down influences on face recognition and face-specific ERPs, and the effects of cortical stimulation at face-specific sites. Ventral face-specific N200 was not evoked by affective stimuli; showed little or no habituation; was not affected by the familiarity or unfamiliarity of faces; showed no semantic priming; and was not affected by face-name learning or identification. P290 and N700 were affected by semantic priming and by face-name learning and identification. The early fraction of N700 and face-specific P350 exhibited significant habituation. About half of the AP350 sites exhibited semantic priming, whereas the VP350 and LP350 sites did not. Cortical stimulation evoked a transient inability to name familiar faces or evoked face-related hallucinations at two-thirds of face-specific N200 sites. These results are discussed in relation to human behavioral studies and monkey single-cell recordings. Discussion of results of all three papers concludes that: face- specific N200 reflects the operation of a module specialized for the perception of human faces; ventral and lateral occipitotemporal cortex are composed of a complex mosaic of functionally discrete patches of cortex of variable number, size and location; in ventral cortex there is a posterior- to-anterior trend in the location of patches in the order letter-strings, form, hands, objects, faces and face parts; P290 and N700 at face-specific N200 sites, and face-specific P350, are subject to top-down influences.
- Publication type
- Journal article
- Research centre
- Swinburne University of Technology. Brain Sciences Institute
- Source
- Cerebral Cortex, Vol. 9, no. 5 (Jul-Aug 1999), pp. 445-458
- Publication year
- 1999
- FOR Code(s)
- 1109 Neurosciences; 1702 Cognitive Sciences
- Keyword(s)
- Electrophysiology; Face; Facial expression; Perception
- Publisher
- Oxford University Press
- ISSN
- 1047-3211
- Publisher URL
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cercor/9.5.445
- Copyright
- Copyright © Oxford University Press 1999.
- Peer reviewed


