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Revisiting the earliest electrophysiological correlate of familiar face recognition.

Authors :
Huang, Wanyi
Wu, Xia
Hu, Liping
Wang, Lei
Ding, Yulong
Qu, Zhe
Source :
International Journal of Psychophysiology. Oct2017, Vol. 120, p42-53. 12p.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

The present study used event-related potentials (ERPs) to reinvestigate the earliest face familiarity effect (FFE: ERP differences between familiar and unfamiliar faces) that genuinely reflects cognitive processes underlying recognition of familiar faces in long-term memory. To trigger relatively early FFEs, participants were required to categorize upright and inverted famous faces and unknown faces in a task that placed high demand on face recognition. More importantly, to determine whether an observed FFE was linked to on-line face recognition, systematical investigation about the relationship between the FFE and behavioral performance of face recognition was conducted. The results showed significant FFEs on P1, N170, N250, and P300 waves. The FFEs on occipital P1 and N170 (< 200 ms) showed reversed polarities for upright and inverted faces, and were not correlated with any behavioral measure (accuracy, response time) or modulated by learning, indicating that they might merely reflect low-level visual differences between face sets. In contrast, the later FFEs on occipito-temporal N250 (~ 230 ms) and centro-parietal P300 (~ 350 ms) showed consistent polarities for upright and inverted faces. The N250 FFE was individually correlated with recognition speed for upright faces, and could be obtained for inverted faces through learning. The P300 FFE was also related to behavior in many aspects. These findings provide novel evidence supporting that cognitive discrimination of familiar and unfamiliar faces starts no less than 200 ms after stimulus onset, and the familiarity effect on N250 may be the first electrophysiological correlate underlying recognition of familiar faces in long-term memory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01678760
Volume :
120
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
International Journal of Psychophysiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
125100160
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpsycho.2017.07.001