Title
Brain regions involved in processing facial identity and expression are differentially selective for surface and edge information.
Abstract
Although different brain regions are widely considered to be involved in the recognition of facial identity and expression, it remains unclear how these regions process different properties of the visual image. Here, we ask how surface-based reflectance information and edge-based shape cues contribute to the perception and neural representation of facial identity and expression. Contrast-reversal was used to generate images in which normal contrast relationships across the surface of the image were disrupted, but edge information was preserved. In a behavioural experiment, contrast-reversal significantly attenuated judgements of facial identity, but only had a marginal effect on judgements of expression. An fMR-adaptation paradigm was then used to ask how brain regions involved in the processing of identity and expression responded to blocks comprising all normal, all contrast-reversed, or a mixture of normal and contrast-reversed faces. Adaptation in the posterior superior temporal sulcus – a region directly linked with processing facial expression – was relatively unaffected by mixing normal with contrast-reversed faces. In contrast, the response of the fusiform face area – a region linked with processing facial identity – was significantly affected by contrast-reversal. These results offer a new perspective on the reasons underlying the neural segregation of facial identity and expression in which brain regions involved in processing invariant aspects of faces, such as identity, are very sensitive to surface-based cues, whereas regions involved in processing changes in faces, such as expression, are relatively dependent on edge-based cues.
Year
DOI
Venue
2014
10.1016/j.neuroimage.2014.04.032
NeuroImage
Keywords
Field
DocType
Vision,Face,Identity,Expression
Neuroscience,Communication,Fusiform face area,Psychology,Cognitive psychology,Facial expression,Reflectivity,Superior temporal sulcus,Perception,Visual perception
Journal
Volume
ISSN
Citations 
97
1053-8119
3
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.45
2
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Richard J. Harris130.45
Andrew W. Young2438.65
Timothy J. Andrews3404.58