Journal article
Authors list: de Haas, B; Schwarzkopf, DS; Alvarez, I; Lawson, RP; Henriksson, L; Kriegeskorte, N; Rees, G
Publication year: 2016
Pages: 9289-9302
Journal: The Journal of Neuroscience
Volume number: 36
Issue number: 36
ISSN: 0270-6474
DOI Link: https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4131-14.2016
Publisher: Society for Neuroscience
Abstract:
Faces are salient social stimuli whose features attract a stereotypical pattern of fixations. The implications of this gaze behavior for perception and brain activity are largely unknown. Here, we characterize and quantify a retinotopic bias implied by typical gaze behavior toward faces, which leads to eyes and mouth appearing most often in the upper and lower visual field, respectively. We found that the adult human visual system is tuned to these contingencies. In two recognition experiments, recognition performance for isolated face parts was better when they were presented at typical, rather than reversed, visual field locations. The recognition cost of reversed locations was equal to similar to 60% of that for whole face inversion in the same sample. Similarly, an fMRI experiment showed that patterns of activity evoked by eye and mouth stimuli in the right inferior occipital gyrus could be separated with significantly higher accuracy when these features were presented at typical, rather than reversed, visual field locations. Our findings demonstrate thathumanface perception is determined not only by the local position of features within a face context, but by whether features appear at the typical retinotopic location given normal gaze behavior. Such location sensitivity may reflect fine-tuning of category-specific visual processing to retinal input statistics. Our findings further suggest that retinotopic heterogeneity might play a role for face inversion effects and for the understanding of conditions affecting gaze behavior toward faces, such as autism spectrum disorders and congenital prosopagnosia.
Citation Styles
Harvard Citation style: de Haas, B., Schwarzkopf, D., Alvarez, I., Lawson, R., Henriksson, L., Kriegeskorte, N., et al. (2016) Perception and Processing of Faces in the Human Brain Is Tuned to Typical Feature Locations, The Journal of Neuroscience, 36(36), pp. 9289-9302. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4131-14.2016
APA Citation style: de Haas, B., Schwarzkopf, D., Alvarez, I., Lawson, R., Henriksson, L., Kriegeskorte, N., & Rees, G. (2016). Perception and Processing of Faces in the Human Brain Is Tuned to Typical Feature Locations. The Journal of Neuroscience. 36(36), 9289-9302. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4131-14.2016