Face perception

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Close-up photograph of an adult male's face, covered in make-up.
An adult male's face with make-up

Facial perception is an individual's understanding and interpretation of the face. Here, perception implies the presence of consciousness and hence excludes automated facial recognition systems. Although facial recognition is found in other species,[1] this article focuses on facial perception in humans.

The perception of facial features is an important part of social cognition.[2] Information gathered from the face helps people understand each other's identity, what they are thinking and feeling, anticipate their actions, recognize their emotions, build connections, and communicate through body language. Developing facial recognition is a necessary building block for complex societal constructs. Being able to perceive identity, mood, age, sex, and race lets people mold the way we interact with one another, and understand our immediate surroundings.[3][4][5]

Though facial perception is mainly considered to stem from visual intake, studies have shown that even people born blind can learn face perception without vision.[6] Studies have supported the notion of a specialized mechanism for perceiving faces.[5]

Overview[edit]

Theories about the processes involved in adult face perception have largely come from two sources; research on normal adult face perception and the study of impairments in face perception that are caused by brain injury or neurological illness.

Bruce & Young model[edit]

Bruce & Young Model of Face Recognition, 1986

One of the most widely accepted theories of face perception argues that understanding faces involves several stages:[7] from basic perceptual manipulations on the sensory information to derive details about the person (such as age, gender or attractiveness), to being able to recall meaningful details such as their name and any relevant past experiences of the individual.

This model, developed by Vicki Bruce and Andrew Young in 1986, argues that face perception involves independent sub-processes working in unison.

  1. A "view centered description" is derived from the perceptual input. Simple physical aspects of the face are used to work out age, gender or basic facial expressions. Most analysis at this stage is on feature-by-feature basis.
  2. This initial information is used to create a structural model of the face, which allows it to be compared to other faces in memory. This explains why the same person from a novel angle can still be recognized (see Thatcher effect).[8]
  3. The structurally encoded representation is transferred to theoretical "face recognition units" that are used with "personal identity nodes" to identify a person through information from semantic memory. Interestingly, the ability to produce someone's name when presented with their face has been shown to be selectively damaged in some cases of brain injury, suggesting that naming may be a separate process from being able to produce other information about a person.

Traumatic brain injury and neurological illness[edit]

Following brain damage, faces can appear severely distorted. A wide variety of distortions can occur – features can droop, enlarge, become discolored, or the entire face can appear to shift relative to the head. This condition is known as prosopometamorphopsia (PMO). In half of the reported cases, distortions are restricted to either the left or the right side of the face, and this form of PMO is called hemi-prosopometamorphopsia (hemi-PMO). Hemi-PMO often results from lesions to the splenium, which connects the right and left hemisphere. In the other half of reported cases, features on both sides of the face appear distorted.[9]

Perceiving facial expressions can involve many areas of the brain, and damaging certain parts of the brain can cause specific impairments in one's ability to perceive a face. As stated earlier, research on the impairments caused by brain injury or neurological illness has helped develop our understanding of cognitive processes. The study of prosopagnosia (an impairment in recognizing faces that is usually caused by brain injury) has been particularly helpful in understanding how normal face perception might work. Individuals with prosopagnosia may differ in their abilities to understand faces, and it has been the investigation of these differences which has suggested that several stage theories might be correct.

Brain imaging studies typically show a great deal of activity in an area of the temporal lobe known as the fusiform gyrus, an area also known to cause prosopagnosia when damaged (particularly when damage occurs on both sides). This evidence has led to a particular interest in this area and it is sometimes referred to as the fusiform face area (FFA) for that reason.[10]

It is important to note that while certain areas of the brain respond selectively to faces, facial processing involves many neural networks which include visual and emotional processing systems. For example, prosopagnosia patients demonstrate neuropsychological support for a specialized face perception mechanism as these people (due to brain damage) have deficits in facial perception, but their cognitive perception of objects remains intact. The face inversion effect provides behavioral support of a specialized mechanism as people tend to have greater deficits in task performance when prompted to react to an inverted face than to an inverted object.[citation needed]

Electrophysiological support comes from the finding that the N170 and M170 responses tend to be face-specific. Neuro-imaging studies, such as those with PET and fMRI, have shown support for a specialized facial processing mechanism, as they have identified regions of the fusiform gyrus that have higher activation during face perception tasks than other visual perception tasks.[5] Theories about the processes involved in adult face perception have largely come from two sources: research on normal adult face perception and the study of impairments in face perception that are caused by brain injury or neurological illness. Novel optical illusions such as the flashed face distortion effect, in which scientific phenomenology outpaces neurological theory, also provide areas for research.

Difficulties in facial emotion processing can also be seen in individuals with traumatic brain injury, in both diffuse axonal injury and focal brain injury.[11]

Early development[edit]

Despite numerous studies, there is no widely accepted time-frame in which the average human develops the ability to perceive faces.

Ability to discern faces from other objects[edit]

Many studies have found that infants will give preferential attention to faces in their visual field, indicating they can discern faces from other objects.

  • While newborns will often show particular interest in faces at around three months of age, that preference slowly disappears, re-emerges late during the first year, and slowly declines once more over the next two years of life.[12]
  • While newborns show a preference to faces as they grow older (specifically between one and four months of age) this interest can be inconsistent.[13]
  • Infants turning their heads towards faces or face-like images suggest rudimentary facial processing capacities.[14][15]
  • The re-emergence of interest in faces at three months is likely influenced by a child's motor abilities.[16][17]

Ability to detect emotion in the face[edit]

Lineart depicting various emotions.
Examples of various emotions

At around seven months of age, infants show the ability to discern faces by emotion. However, whether they have fully developed emotion recognition is unclear. Discerning visual differences in facial expressions is different to understanding the valence of a particular emotion.

  • Seven-month-olds seem capable of associating emotional prosodies with facial expressions. When presented with a happy or angry face, followed by an emotionally neutral word read in a happy or angry tone, their event-related potentials follow different patterns. Happy faces followed by angry vocal tones produce more changes than the other incongruous pairing, while there was no such difference between happy and angry congruous pairings. The greater reaction implies that infants held greater expectations of a happy vocal tone after seeing a happy face than an angry tone following an angry face.[18]
  • By the age of seven months, children are able to recognize an angry or fearful facial expression, perhaps because of the threat-salient nature of the emotion. Despite this ability, newborns are not yet aware of the emotional content encoded within facial expressions.[19]
  • Infants can comprehend facial expressions as social cues representing the feelings of other people before they are a year old. Seven-month-old infants show greater negative central components to angry faces that are looking directly at them than elsewhere, although the gaze of fearful faces produces no difference. In addition, two event-related potentials in the posterior part of the brain are differently aroused by the two negative expressions tested. These results indicate that infants at this age can partially understand the higher level of threat from anger directed at them.[20] They also showed activity in the occipital areas.[20]
  • Five-month-olds, when presented with an image of a fearful expression and a happy expression, exhibit similar event-related potentials for both. However, when seven-month-olds are given the same treatment, they focus more on the fearful face. This result indicates increased cognitive focus toward fear that reflects the threat-salient nature of the emotion.[21] Seven-month-olds regard happy and sad faces as distinct emotive categories.[22]
  • By seven months, infants are able to use facial expressions to understand others' behavior. Seven-month-olds look to use facial cues to understand the motives of other people in ambiguous situations, as shown in a study where infants watched the experimenter's face longer if the experimenter took a toy from them and maintained a neutral expression, as opposed to if the experimenter made a happy expression.[23] When infants are exposed to faces, it varies depending on factors including facial expression and eye gaze direction.[22][20]
  • Emotions likely play a large role in our social interactions. The perception of a positive or negative emotion on a face affects the way that an individual perceives and processes that face. A face that is perceived to have a negative emotion is processed in a less holistic manner than a face displaying a positive emotion.[24]
  • While seven-month-olds have been found to focus more on fearful faces, a study found that "happy expressions elicit enhanced sympathetic arousal in infants" both when facial expressions were presented subliminally and in a way that the infants were consciously aware of the stimulus.[25] Conscious awareness of a stimulus is not connected to an infant's reaction.[25]

Ability to recognize familiar faces[edit]

It is unclear when humans develop the ability to recognize familiar faces. Studies have varying results, and may depend on multiple factors (such as continued exposure to particular faces during a certain time period).

  • Early perceptual experience is crucial to the development of adult visual perception, including the ability to identify familiar people and comprehend facial expressions. The capacity to discern between faces, like language[how?], appears to have broad potential in early life that is whittled down to the kinds of faces experienced in early life.[26]
  • The neural substrates of face perception in infants are similar to those of adults, but the limits of child-safe imaging technology currently obscure specific information from subcortical areas[27] like the amygdala, which is active in adult facial perception. They also showed activity near the fusiform gyrus,[27]
  • Healthy adults likely process faces via a retinotectal (subcortical) pathway.[28]
  • Infants can discern between macaque faces at six months of age, but, without continued exposure, cannot do so at nine months of age. If they were shown photographs of macaques during this three-month period, they were more likely to retain this ability.[29]
  • Faces "convey a wealth of information that we use to guide our social interactions".[30] They also found that the neurological mechanisms responsible for face recognition are present by age five. Children process faces is similar to that of adults, but adults process faces more efficiently. The may be because of advancements in memory and cognitive functioning.[30]
  • Interest in the social world is increased by interaction with the physical environment. They found that training three-month-old infants to reach for objects with Velcro-covered "sticky mitts" increased the attention they pay to faces compared to moving objects through their hands and control groups.[31]

Ability to 'mimic' faces[edit]

A commonly disputed topic is the age at which we can mimic facial expressions.

  • Infants as young as two days are capable of mimicking an adult, able to note details like mouth and eye shape as well as move their own muscles to produce similar patterns.[32]
  • However, the idea that infants younger than two could mimic facial expressions was disputed by Susan S. Jones, who believed that infants are unaware of the emotional content encoded within facial expressions, and also found they are not able to imitate facial expressions until their second year of life. She also found that mimicry emerged at different ages.[33]

Neuroanatomy[edit]

Key areas of the brain[edit]

A side-on image of an fMRI scan of a human brain.
A computer-enhanced fMRI scan of a person who has been asked to look at faces

Facial perception has neuroanatomical correlates in the brain.

The fusiform face area (BA37— Brodmann area 37) is located in the lateral fusiform gyrus. It is thought that this area is involved in holistic processing of faces and it is sensitive to the presence of facial parts as well as the configuration of these parts. The fusiform face area is also necessary for successful face detection and identification. This is supported by fMRI activation and studies on prosopagnosia, which involves lesions in the fusiform face area.[34][35][36][37][38]

The occipital face area is located in the inferior occipital gyrus.[35][38] Similar to the fusiform face area, this area is also active during successful face detection and identification, a finding that is supported by fMRI and MEG activation.[34][38] The occipital face area is involved and necessary in the analysis of facial parts but not in the spacing or configuration of facial parts. This suggests that the occipital face area may be involved in a facial processing step that occurs prior to fusiform face area processing.[34][38]

The superior temporal sulcus is involved in recognition of facial parts and is not sensitive to the configuration of these parts. It is also thought that this area is involved in gaze perception.[38][39] The superior temporal sulcus has demonstrated increased activation when attending to gaze direction.[34][38][40]

During face perception, major activations occur in the extrastriate areas bilaterally, particularly in the above three areas.[34][35][38] Perceiving an inverted human face involves increased activity in the inferior temporal cortex, while perceiving a misaligned face involves increased activity in the occipital cortex. No results were found when perceiving a dog face, suggesting a process specific to human faces.[41] Bilateral activation is generally shown in all of these specialized facial areas.[42][43][44][45][46][47] However, some studies show increased activation in one side over the other: for instance, the right fusiform gyrus is more important for facial processing in complex situations.[36]

BOLD fMRI mapping and the fusiform face area[edit]

The majority of fMRI studies use blood oxygen level dependent (BOLD) contrast to determine which areas of the brain are activated by various cognitive functions.[48]

One study used BOLD fMRI mapping to identify activation in the brain when subjects viewed both cars and faces. They found that the occipital face area, the fusiform face area, the superior temporal sulcus, the amygdala, and the anterior/inferior cortex of the temporal lobe all played roles in contrasting faces from cars, with initial face perception beginning in the fusiform face area and occipital face areas. This entire region forms a network that acts to distinguish faces. The processing of faces in the brain is known as a "sum of parts" perception.[49]

However, the individual parts of the face must be processed first in order to put all of the pieces together. In early processing, the occipital face area contributes to face perception by recognizing the eyes, nose, and mouth as individual pieces.[50]

Researchers also used BOLD fMRI mapping to determine the patterns of activation in the brain when parts of the face were presented in combination and when they were presented singly.[51] The occipital face area is activated by the visual perception of single features of the face, for example, the nose and mouth, and preferred combination of two-eyes over other combinations. This suggests that the occipital face area recognizes the parts of the face at the early stages of recognition.

On the contrary, the fusiform face area shows no preference for single features, because the fusiform face area is responsible for "holistic/configural" information,[52] meaning that it puts all of the processed pieces of the face together in later processing. This is supported by a study which found that regardless of the orientation of a face, subjects were impacted by the configuration of the individual facial features. Subjects were also impacted by the coding of the relationships between those features. This shows that processing is done by a summation of the parts in later stages of recognition.[49]

The fusiform gyrus and the amygdala[edit]

The fusiform gyri are preferentially responsive to faces, whereas the parahippocampal/lingual gyri are responsive to buildings.[53]

While certain areas respond selectively to faces, facial processing involves many neural networks, including visual and emotional processing systems. While looking at faces displaying emotions (especially those with fear facial expressions) compared to neutral faces there is increased activity in the right fusiform gyrus. This increased activity also correlates with increased amygdala activity in the same situations.[54] The emotional processing effects observed in the fusiform gyrus are decreased in patients with amygdala lesions.[54] This demonstrates connections between the amygdala and facial processing areas.[54]

Face familiarity also affects the fusiform gyrus and amygdala activation. Multiple regions activated by similar face components indicates that facial processing is a complex process.[54] Increased brain activation in precuneus and cuneus often occurs when differentiation of two faces are easy (kin and familiar non-kin faces) and the role of posterior medial substrates for visual processing of faces with familiar features (faces averaged with that of a sibling).[55]

The object form topology hypothesis posits a topological organization of neural substrates for object and facial processing.[56] However, there is disagreement: the category-specific and process-map models could accommodate most other proposed models for the neural underpinnings of facial processing.[57]

Most neuroanatomical substrates for facial processing are perfused by the middle cerebral artery. Therefore, facial processing has been studied using measurements of mean cerebral blood flow velocity in the middle cerebral arteries bilaterally. During facial recognition tasks, greater changes occur in the right middle cerebral artery than the left.[58][59] Men are right-lateralized and women left-lateralized during facial processing tasks.[60]

Just as memory and cognitive function separate the abilities of children and adults to recognize faces, the familiarity of a face may also play a role in the perception of faces.[49] Recording event-related potentials in the brain to determine the timing of facial recognition[61] showed that familiar faces are indicated by a stronger N250,[61] a specific wavelength response that plays a role in the visual memory of faces.[62] Similarly, all faces elicit the N170 response in the brain.[63]

The brain conceptually needs only ~50 neurons to encode any human face, with facial features projected on individual axes (neurons) in a 50-dimensional "Face Space".[64]

Cognitive neuroscience[edit]

3D rendering of a purple greeble
A 'greeble' (nonsense figure used in face recognition experiments)

Cognitive neuroscientists Isabel Gauthier and Michael Tarr are two of the major proponents of the view that face recognition involves expert discrimination of similar objects.[65] Other scientists, in particular Nancy Kanwisher and her colleagues, argue that face recognition involves processes that are face-specific and that are not recruited by expert discriminations in other object classes.[66]

Studies by Gauthier have shown that an area of the brain known as the fusiform gyrus (sometimes called the fusiform face area because it is active during face recognition) is also active when study participants are asked to discriminate between different types of birds and cars,[67] and even when participants become expert at distinguishing computer generated nonsense shapes known as greebles.[68] This suggests that the fusiform gyrus have a general role in the recognition of similar visual objects.

The activity found by Gauthier when participants viewed non-face objects was not as strong as when participants were viewing faces, however this could be because we have much more expertise for faces than for most other objects. Furthermore, not all findings of this research have been successfully replicated, for example, other research groups using different study designs have found that the fusiform gyrus is specific to faces and other nearby regions deal with non-face objects.[69]

However, these findings are difficult to interpret: failures to replicate are null effects and can occur for many different reasons. In contrast, each replication adds a great deal of weight to a particular argument. There are now multiple replications with greebles, with birds and cars,[70] and two unpublished studies with chess experts.[71][72]

Although expertise sometimes recruits the fusiform face area, a more common finding is that expertise leads to focal category-selectivity in the fusiform gyrus—a pattern similar in terms of antecedent factors and neural specificity to that seen for faces. As such, it remains an open question as to whether face recognition and expert-level object recognition recruit similar neural mechanisms across different subregions of the fusiform or whether the two domains literally share the same neural substrates. At least one study argues that the issue is nonsensical, as multiple measurements of the fusiform face area within an individual often overlap no more with each other than measurements of fusiform face area and expertise-predicated regions.[73]

fMRI studies have asked whether expertise has any specific connection to the fusiform face area in particular, by testing for expertise effects in both the fusiform face area and a nearby but not face-selective region called LOC (Rhodes et al., JOCN 2004; Op de Beeck et al., JN 2006; Moore et al., JN 2006; Yue et al. VR 2006). In all studies, expertise effects are significantly stronger in the LOC than in the fusiform face area, and indeed expertise effects were only borderline significant in the fusiform face area in two of the studies, while the effects were robust and significant in the LOC in all studies.[citation needed]

Therefore, it is still not clear in exactly which situations the fusiform gyrus becomes active, although it is certain that face recognition relies heavily on this area and damage to it can lead to severe face recognition impairment.

Face advantage in memory recall[edit]

During face perception, neural networks make connections with the brain to recall memories.[74]

According to the Seminal Model of face perception, there are three stages of face processing:[7][74]

  • recognition of the face
  • recall of memories and information linked with that face
  • name recall

There are exceptions to this order. For example, names are recalled faster than semantic information in cases of highly familiar stimuli.[75] While the face is a powerful identifier, the voice also helps in recognition.[76][77]

Research has tested if faces or voices make it easier to identify individuals and recall semantic memory and episodic memory.[78] These experiments looked at all three stages of face processing. The experiment showed two groups of celebrity and familiar faces or voices with a between-group design and asked the participants to recall information about them.[78] The participants were first asked if the stimulus was familiar. If they answered yes then they were asked for information (semantic memory) and memories (episodic memory) that fit the face or voice presented. These experiments demonstrated the phenomenon of face advantage and how it persists through follow-up studies.[78]

Recognition-performance issue[edit]

After the first experiments on the advantage of faces over voices in memory recall, errors and gaps were found in the methods used.[78]

For one, there was not a clear face advantage for the recognition stage of face processing. Participants showed a familiarity-only response to voices more often than faces.[79] In other words, when voices were recognized (about 60–70% of the time) they were much harder to recall biographical information but very good at being recognized.[78] The results were looked at as remember versus know judgements. A lot more remember results (or familiarity) occurred with voices, and more know (or memory recall) responses happened with faces.[77] This phenomenon persists through experiments dealing with criminal line-ups in prisons. Witnesses are more likely to say that a suspect's voice sounded familiar than his/her face even though they cannot remember anything about the suspect.[80] This discrepancy is due to a larger amount of guesswork and false alarms that occur with voices.[77]

To give faces a similar ambiguity to that of voices, the face stimuli were blurred in the follow-up experiment.[79] This experiment followed the same procedures as the first, presenting two groups with sets of stimuli made up of half celebrity faces and half unfamiliar faces.[78] The only difference was that the face stimuli were blurred so that detailed features could not be seen. Participants were then asked to say if they recognized the person, if they could recall specific biographical information about them, and finally if they knew the person's name. The results were completely different from those of the original experiment, supporting the view that there were problems in the first experiment's methods.[78] According to the results of the followup, the same amount of information and memory could be recalled through voices and faces, dismantling the face advantage. However, these results are flawed and premature because other methodological issues in the experiment still needed to be fixed.[78]

Content of speech[edit]

The process of controlling the content of speech extract has proven to be more difficult than the elimination of non facial cues in photographs.[78]

Thus the findings of experiments that did not control this factor lead to misleading conclusions regarding the voice recognition over the face recognition.[78] For example, in an experiment it was found that 40% of the time participants could easily pair the celebrity-voice with their occupation just by guessing.[79] In order to eliminate these errors, experimenters removed parts of the voice samples that could possibly give clues to the identity of the target, such as catchphrases.[81] Even after controlling the voice samples as well as the face samples (using blurred faces), studies have shown that semantic information can be more accessible to retrieve when individuals are recognizing faces than voices.[82]

Another technique to control the content of the speech extracts is to present the faces and voices of personally familiar individuals, like the participant's teachers or neighbors, instead of the faces and voices of celebrities.[78] In this way alike words are used for the speech extracts.[78] For example, the familiar targets are asked to read exactly the same scripted speech for their voice extracts. The results showed again that semantic information is easier to retrieve when individuals are recognizing faces than voices.[78]

Frequency-of-exposure issue[edit]

Another factor that has to be controlled in order for the results to be reliable is the frequency of exposure.[78]

If we take the example of celebrities, people are exposed to celebrities' faces more often than their voices because of the mass media.[78] Through magazines, newspapers and the Internet, individuals are exposed to celebrities' faces without their voices on an everyday basis rather than their voices without their faces.[78] Thus, someone could argue that for all of the experiments that were done until now the findings were a result of the frequency of exposure to the faces of celebrities rather than their voices.[83]

To overcome this problem researchers decided to use personally familiar individuals as stimuli instead of celebrities.[78] Personally familiar individuals, such as participant's teachers, are for the most part heard as well as seen.[84] Studies that used this type of control also demonstrated the face advantage.[84] Students were able to retrieve semantic information more readily when recognizing their teachers faces (both normal and blurred) rather than their voices.[82]

However, researchers over the years have found an even more effective way to control not only the frequency of exposure but also the content of the speech extracts, the associative learning paradigm.[78] Participants are asked to link semantic information as well as names with pre-experimentally unknown voices and faces.[85][86] In a current experiment that used this paradigm, a name and a profession were given together with, accordingly, a voice, a face or both to three participant groups.[85] The associations described above were repeated four times.[85]

The next step was a cued recall task in which every stimulus that was learned in the previous phase was introduced and participants were asked to tell the profession and the name for every stimulus.[85][87] Again, the results showed that semantic information can be more accessible to retrieve when individuals are recognizing faces than voices even when the frequency of exposure was controlled.[78][85]

Extension to episodic memory and explanation for existence[edit]

Episodic memory is our ability to remember specific, previously experienced events.[88]

In recognition of faces as it pertains to episodic memory, there has been shown to be activation in the left lateral prefrontal cortex, parietal lobe, and the left medial frontal/anterior cingulate cortex.[89][90] It was also found that a left lateralization during episodic memory retrieval in the parietal cortex correlated strongly with success in retrieval.[89] This may possibly be due to the hypothesis that the link between face recognition and episodic memory were stronger than those of voice and episodic memory.[79] This hypothesis can also be supported by the existence of specialized face recognition devices thought to be located in the temporal lobes.[89][91]

There is also evidence of the existence of two separate neural systems for face recognition: one for familiar faces and another for newly learned faces.[89] One explanation for this link between face recognition and episodic memory is that since face recognition is a major part of human existence, the brain creates a link between the two in order to be better able to communicate with others.[92]

Three-layer model of self-cognition developed by Motoaki Sugiura

Self-face perception[edit]

Though many animals have face-perception capabilities, the recognition of self-face is phenomenon has been observed to be unique to only a few species. There is a particular interest in the study of self-face perception because of its relation to the perceptual integration process.

One study found that the perception/recognition of one's own face was unaffected by changing contexts, while the perception/recognition of familiar and unfamiliar faces was adversely affected.[93] Another study that focused on older adults found that they had self-face advantage in configural processing but not featural processing.[94]

In 2014, Motoaki Sugiura developed a conceptual model for self-recognition by breaking it into three categories: the physical, interpersonal, and social selves.[95][96]

Mirror test[edit]

Gordon Gallup Jr. developed a technique in 1970 as an attempt to measure self-awareness. This technique is commonly referred to has the mirror test.

The method involves placing a marker on the subject in a place they can not see without a mirror (e.g. ones forehead). The marker must be placed inconspicuously enough that the subject does not become aware that they have been marked. Once the marker is placed, the subject is given access to a mirror. If the subject investigates the mark (e.g. tries to wipe the mark off), this would indicate that the subject understands they are looking at a reflection of themselves, as opposed to perceiving the mirror as an extension of their environment.[97] (e.g., thinking the reflection is another person/animal behind a window)

Though this method is regarded as one of the more effective techniques when it comes to measuring self-awareness, it certainly not perfect. There are many factors at play that could have an effect on the outcome. For example, if an animal is biologically blind, like a mole, we can not assume that they inherently lack self awareness. It can only be assumed that visual self-recognition, is possibly one of many ways for a living being to be considered as cognitively "self aware".

Gender[edit]

Black-and-white photograph of a man, face turned away from the camera, and a woman staring at the viewer.
A human male and female

Studies using electrophysiological techniques have demonstrated gender-related differences during a face recognition memory task and a facial affect identification task.[98]

In facial perception there was no association to estimated intelligence, suggesting that face recognition in women is unrelated to several basic cognitive processes.[99] Gendered differences may suggest a role for sex hormones.[100] In females there may be variability for psychological functions related to differences in hormonal levels during different phases of the menstrual cycle.[101][102]

Data obtained in norm and in pathology support asymmetric face processing.[103][104][105]

The left inferior frontal cortex and the bilateral occipitotemporal junction may respond equally to all face conditions.[106] Some contend that both the left inferior frontal cortex and the occipitotemporal junction are implicated in facial memory.[107][108][109] The right inferior temporal/fusiform gyrus responds selectively to faces but not to non-faces. The right temporal pole is activated during the discrimination of familiar faces and scenes from unfamiliar ones.[110] Right asymmetry in the mid-temporal lobe for faces has also been shown using 133-Xenon measured cerebral blood flow.[111] Other investigators have observed right lateralization for facial recognition in previous electrophysiological and imaging studies.[112]

Asymmetric facial perception implies implementing different hemispheric strategies. The right hemisphere would employ a holistic strategy, and the left an analytic strategy.[113][114][115][116]

A 2007 study, using functional transcranial Doppler spectroscopy, demonstrated that men were right-lateralized for object and facial perception, while women were left-lateralized for facial tasks but showed a right-tendency or no lateralization for object perception.[117] This could be taken as evidence for topological organization of these cortical areas in men. It may suggest that the latter extends from the area implicated in object perception to a much greater area involved in facial perception.

This agrees with the object form topology hypothesis proposed by Ishai.[118] However, the relatedness of object and facial perception was process-based, and appears to be associated with their common holistic processing strategy in the right hemisphere. Moreover, when the same men were presented with facial paradigm requiring analytic processing, the left hemisphere was activated. This agrees with the suggestion made by Gauthier in 2000, that the extrastriate cortex contains areas that are best suited for different computations, and described as the process-map model.

Therefore, the proposed models are not mutually exclusive: facial processing imposes no new constraints on the brain besides those used for other stimuli.

Each stimulus may have been mapped by category into face or non-face, and by process into holistic or analytic. Therefore, a unified category-specific process-mapping system was implemented for either right or left cognitive styles. For facial perception, men likely use a category-specific process-mapping system for right cognitive style, and women use the same for the left.[117]

Ethnicity[edit]

Four faces, two caucasian (first two rows) and two Asian (last two rows) as well as their edited counterparts. The middle face of each row is the original face upon which the manipulations were made. The leftmost face has eyes or mouth 20% smaller than the original (the middle face), the face located second from the left has eyes or mouth 10% smaller than the original, the rightmost face has eyes or mouth 20% larger than the original, and the face located second from the right has eyes or mouth 10% larger than the original.
Sample of real and edited white and Asian faces used in study of the cross-race effect[119]

Differences in own- versus other-race face recognition and perceptual discrimination was first researched in 1914.[120] Humans tend to perceive people of other races than their own to all look alike:

Other things being equal, individuals of a given race are distinguishable from each other in proportion to our familiarity, to our contact with the race as whole. Thus, to the uninitiated American all Asiatics look alike, while to the Asiatics, all White men look alike.[120]

This phenomenon, known as the cross-race effect, is also called the own-race effect, other-race effect, own race bias, or interracial face-recognition deficit.[121]

It is difficult to measure the true influence of the cross-race effect.

A 1990 study found that other-race effect is larger among White subjects than among African-American subjects, whereas a 1979 study found the opposite.[122] D. Stephen Lindsay and colleagues note that results in these studies could be due to intrinsic difficulty in recognizing the faces presented, an actual difference in the size of cross-race effect between the two test groups, or some combination of these two factors.[122] Shepherd reviewed studies that found better performance on African-American faces, White faces, and studies where no difference was found.[123][124][125]

Overall, Shepherd reported a reliable positive correlation between the size of the effect and the amount of interaction subjects had with members of the other race. This correlation reflects the fact that African-American subjects, who performed equally well on faces of both races in Shepherd's study, almost always responded with the highest possible self-rating of amount of interaction with white people, whereas white counterparts displayed a larger other-race effect and reported less other-race interaction. This difference in rating was statistically reliable.[122]

The cross-race effect seems to appear in humans at around six months of age.[126]

Challenging the cross-race effect[edit]

Cross-race effects can be changed through interaction with people of other races.[127] Other-race experience is a major influence on the cross-race effect.[128] A series of studies revealed that participants with greater other-race experience were consistently more accurate at discriminating other-race faces than participants with less experience.[129][128] Many current models of the effect assume that holistic face processing mechanisms are more fully engaged when viewing own-race faces.[130]

The own-race effect appears related to increased ability to extract information about the spatial relationships between different facial features.[131]

A deficit occurs when viewing people of another race because visual information specifying race takes up mental attention at the expense of individuating information.[132] Further research using perceptual tasks could shed light on the specific cognitive processes involved in the other-race effect.[122] The own-race effect likely extends beyond racial membership into in-group favoritism. Categorizing somebody by the university they attend yields similar results to the own-race effect.[133]

Similarly, men tend to recognize fewer female faces than women do, whereas there are no sex differences for male faces.[134]

If made aware of the own-race effect prior to the experiment, test subjects show significantly less, if any, of the own-race effect.[135]

Autism[edit]

Photograph of a child with autism stacking cans.
A child with autism

Autism spectrum disorder is a comprehensive neural developmental disorder that produces social, communicative,[136] and perceptual deficits.[137] Individuals with autism exhibit difficulties with facial identity recognition and recognizing emotional expressions.[138][139] These deficits are suspected to spring from abnormalities in early and late stages of facial processing.[140]

Speed and methods[edit]

People with autism process face and non-face stimuli with the same speed.[140][141]

In neurotypical individuals, a preference for face processing results in a faster processing speed in comparison to non-face stimuli.[140][141] These individuals use holistic processing when perceiving faces.[137] In contrast, individuals with autism employ part-based processing or bottom-up processing, focusing on individual features rather than the face as a whole.[142][143] People with autism direct their gaze primarily to the lower half of the face, specifically the mouth, varying from the eye-trained gaze of neurotypical people.[142][143][144][145][146] This deviation does not employ the use of facial prototypes, which are templates stored in memory that make for easy retrieval.[139][147]

Additionally, individuals with autism display difficulty with recognition memory, specifically memory that aids in identifying faces. The memory deficit is selective for faces and does not extend to other visual input.[139] These face-memory deficits are possibly products of interference between face-processing regions.[139]

Associated difficulties[edit]

Autism often manifests in weakened social ability, due to decreased eye contact, joint attention, interpretation of emotional expression, and communicative skills.[148]

These deficiencies can be seen in infants as young as nine months.[140] Some experts use 'face avoidance' to describe how infants who are later diagnosed with autism preferentially attend to non-face objects.[136] Furthermore, some have proposed that children with autism's difficulty in grasping the emotional content of faces is the result of a general inattentiveness to facial expression, and not an incapacity to process emotional information in general.[136]

The constraints are viewed to cause impaired social engagement.[149] Furthermore, research suggests a link between decreased face processing abilities in individuals with autism and later deficits in theory of mind. While typically developing individuals are able to relate others' emotional expressions to their actions, individuals with autism do not demonstrate this skill to the same extent.[150]

This causation, however, resembles the chicken or the egg dispute. Some theorize that social impairment leads to perceptual problems.[142] In this perspective, a biological lack of social interest inhibits facial recognition due to under-use.[142]

Neurology[edit]

Many of the obstacles that individuals with autism face in terms of facial processing may be derived from abnormalities in the fusiform face area and amygdala.

Typically, the fusiform face area in individuals with autism has reduced volume.[151][142] This volume reduction has been attributed to deviant amygdala activity that does not flag faces as emotionally salient, and thus decreases activation levels.

Studies are not conclusive as to which brain areas people with autism use instead. One found that, when looking at faces, people with autism exhibit activity in brain regions normally active when neurotypical individuals perceive objects.[142] Another found that during facial perception, people with autism use different neural systems, each using their own unique neural circuitry.[151]

Compensation mechanisms[edit]

As autistic individuals age, scores on behavioral tests assessing ability to perform face-emotion recognition increase to levels similar to controls.[140][152]

The recognition mechanisms of these individuals are still atypical, though often effective.[152] In terms of face identity-recognition, compensation can include a more pattern-based strategy, first seen in face inversion tasks.[145] Alternatively, older individuals compensate by using mimicry of other's facial expressions and rely on their motor feedback of facial muscles for face emotion-recognition.[153]

Schizophrenia[edit]

The portrait Schizophrenia, by William A. Ursprung.
Schizophrenia, by William A. Ursprung

Schizophrenia is known to affect attention, perception, memory, learning, processing, reasoning, and problem solving.[154]

Schizophrenia has been linked to impaired face and emotion perception.[154][155][156][93] People with schizophrenia demonstrate worse accuracy and slower response time in face perception tasks in which they are asked to match faces, remember faces, and recognize which emotions are present in a face.[93] People with schizophrenia have more difficulty matching upright faces than they do with inverted faces.[154] A reduction in configural processing, using the distance between features of an item for recognition or identification (e.g. features on a face such as eyes or nose), has also been linked to schizophrenia.[93]

Schizophrenia patients are able to easily identify a "happy" affect but struggle to identify faces as "sad" or "fearful".[156] Impairments in face and emotion perception are linked to impairments in social skills, due to the individual's inability to distinguish facial emotions.[156][93] People with schizophrenia tend to demonstrate a reduced N170 response, atypical face scanning patterns, and a configural processing dysfunction.[157] The severity of schizophrenia symptoms has been found to correlate with the severity of impairment in face perception.[93]

Individuals with diagnosed schizophrenia and antisocial personality disorder have been found to have even more impairment in face and emotion perception than individuals with just schizophrenia. These individuals struggle to identify anger, surprise, and disgust. There is a link between aggression and emotion perception difficulties for people with this dual diagnosis.[156]

Data from magnetic resonance imaging and functional magnetic resonance imaging has shown that a smaller volume of the fusiform gyrus is linked to greater impairments in face perception.[155]

There is a positive correlation between self-face recognition and other-face recognition difficulties in individuals with schizophrenia. The degree of schizotypy has also been shown to correlate with self-face difficulties, unusual perception difficulties, and other face recognition difficulties.[158] Schizophrenia patients report more feelings of strangeness when looking in a mirror than do normal controls. Hallucinations, somatic concerns, and depression have all been found to be associated with self-face perception difficulties.[159]

Other animals[edit]

Neurobiologist Jenny Morton and her team have been able to teach sheep to choose a familiar face over unfamiliar one when presented with two photographs, which has led to the discovery that sheep can recognize human faces.[160][161] Archerfish (distant relatives of humans) were able to differentiate between forty-four different human faces, which supports the theory that there is no need for a neocortex or a history of discerning human faces in order to do so.[162] Pigeons were found to use the same parts of the brain as humans do to distinguish between happy and neutral faces or male and female faces.[162]

Artificial intelligence[edit]

Much effort has gone into developing software that can recognize human faces.

This work has occurred in a branch of artificial intelligence known as computer vision, which uses the psychology of face perception to inform software design. Recent breakthroughs use noninvasive functional transcranial Doppler spectroscopy to locate specific responses to facial stimuli.[163] The new system uses input responses, called cortical long-term potentiation, to trigger target face search from a computerized face database system.[163][164] Such a system provides for brain-machine interface for facial recognition, referred to as cognitive biometrics.

Another application is estimating age from images of faces. Compared with other cognition problems, age estimation from facial images is challenging, mainly because the aging process is influenced by many external factors like physical condition and living style.The aging process is also slow, making sufficient data difficult to collect.[165]

Nemrodov[edit]

In 2016, Dan Nemrodov conducted multivariate analyses of EEG signals that might be involved in identity related information and applied pattern classification to event-related potential signals both in time and in space. The main target of the study were:

  1. evaluating whether previously known event-related potential components such as N170 and others are involved in individual face recognition or not
  2. locating temporal landmarks of individual level recognition from event-related potential signals
  3. figuring out the spatial profile of individual face recognition

For the experiment, conventional event-related potential analyses and pattern classification of event-related potential signals were conducted given preprocessed EEG signals.[166]

This and a further study showed the existence of a spatio-temporal profile of individual face recognition process and reconstruction of individual face images was possible by utilizing such profile and informative features that contribute to encoding of identity related information.

Genetic basis[edit]

While many cognitive abilities, such as general intelligence, have a clear genetic basis, evidence for the genetic basis of facial recognition is fairly recent. Current evidence suggests that facial recognition abilities are highly linked to genetic, rather than environmental, bases.

Early research focused on genetic disorders which impair facial recognition abilities, such as Turner syndrome, which results in impaired amygdala functioning. A 2003 study found significantly poorer facial recognition abilities in individuals with Turner syndrome, suggesting that the amygdala impacts face perception.[94]

Evidence for a genetic basis in the general population, however, comes from twin studies in which the facial recognition scores on the Cambridge Face Memory test were twice as similar for monozygotic twins in comparison to dizygotic twins.[167] This finding was supported by studies which found a similar difference in facial recognition scores[168][169] and those which determined the heritability of facial recognition to be approximately 61%.[169]

There was no significant relationship between facial recognition scores and other cognitive abilities,[167] most notably general object recognition. This suggests that facial recognition abilities are heritable, and have a genetic basis independent from other cognitive abilities.[167] Research suggests that more extreme examples of facial recognition abilities, specifically hereditary prosopagnosics, are highly genetically correlated.[170]

For hereditary prosopagnosics, an autosomal dominant model of inheritance has been proposed.[171] Research also correlated the probability of hereditary prosopagnosia with the single nucleotide polymorphisms[170] along the oxytocin receptor gene (OXTR), suggesting that these alleles serve a critical role in normal face perception. Mutation from the wild type allele at these loci has also been found to result in other disorders in which social and facial recognition deficits are common,[170] such as autism spectrum disorder, which may imply that the genetic bases for general facial recognition are complex and polygenic.[170]

This relationship between OXTR and facial recognition is also supported by studies of individuals who do not have hereditary prosopagnosia.[172][173]

Social perceptions of faces[edit]

People make rapid judgements about others based on facial appearance. Some judgements are formed very quickly and accurately, with adults correctly categorising the sex of adult faces with only a 75ms exposure[174] and with near 100% accuracy.[175] The accuracy of some other judgements are less easily confirmed, though there is evidence that perceptions of health made from faces are at least partly accurate, with health judgements reflecting fruit and vegetable intake,[176] body fat and BMI.[176] People also form judgements about others' personalities from their faces, and there is evidence of at least partial accuracy in this domain too.[177]

Valence-dominance model[edit]

The valence-dominance model of face recognition is a widely-cited model that suggests that the social judgements made of faces can be summarised into two dimensions: valence (positive-negative) and dominance (dominant-submissive).[178] A recent large-scale multi-country replication project largely supported this model across different world regions, though found that a potential third dimension may also be important in some regions[179] and other research suggests that the valence-dominance model also applies to social perceptions of bodies.[180]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Pavelas (19 April 2021). "Facial Recognition is an Easy Task for Animals". Sky Biometry. Archived from the original on 19 April 2021. Retrieved 19 April 2021.
  2. ^ Krawczyk, Daniel C. (2018). Reasoning; The Neuroscience of How We Think. Academic Press. pp. 283–311. ISBN 9780128092859.
  3. ^ Quinn, Kimberly A.; Macrae, C. Neil (November 2011). "The face and person perception: Insights from social cognition: Categorizing faces". British Journal of Psychology. 102 (4): 849–867. doi:10.1111/j.2044-8295.2011.02030.x. PMID 21988388.
  4. ^ Young, Andrew W.; Haan, Edward H. F.; Bauer, Russell M. (March 2008). "Face perception: A very special issue". Journal of Neuropsychology. 2 (1): 1–14. doi:10.1348/174866407x269848. PMID 19334301.
  5. ^ a b c Kanwisher, Nancy; Yovel, Galit (2009). "Face Perception". Handbook of Neuroscience for the Behavioral Sciences. doi:10.1002/9780470478509.neubb002043. ISBN 9780470478509.
  6. ^ Likova, Lora T. (19 April 2021). "Learning face perception without vision: Rebound learning effect and hemispheric differences in congenital vs late-onset blindness". IS&T Int Symp Electron Imaging. 2019 (2019): 2371-23713 (12): 237-1–237-13. doi:10.2352/ISSN.2470-1173.2019.12.HVEI-237. PMC 6800090. PMID 31633079.
  7. ^ a b Bruce, V.; Young, A (1986). "Understanding Face Recognition". British Journal of Psychology. 77 (3): 305–327. doi:10.1111/j.2044-8295.1986.tb02199.x. PMID 3756376.
  8. ^ Mansour, Jamal; Lindsay, Roderick (30 January 2010). "Facial Recognition". Corsini Encyclopedia of Psychology. pp. 1–2. doi:10.1002/9780470479216.corpsy0342. ISBN 9780470479216.
  9. ^ Duchaine, Brad. "Understanding Prosopometamorphopsia (PMO)".
  10. ^ Kanwisher, Nancy; McDermott, Josh; Chun, Marvin M. (1 June 1997). "The Fusiform Face Area: A Module in Human Extrastriate Cortex Specialized for Face Perception". The Journal of Neuroscience. 17 (11): 4302–4311. doi:10.1523/JNEUROSCI.17-11-04302.1997. PMC 6573547. PMID 9151747.
  11. ^ Yassin, Walid; Callahan, Brandy L.; Ubukata, Shiho; Sugihara, Genichi; Murai, Toshiya; Ueda, Keita (16 April 2017). "Facial emotion recognition in patients with focal and diffuse axonal injury". Brain Injury. 31 (5): 624–630. doi:10.1080/02699052.2017.1285052. PMID 28350176. S2CID 4488184.
  12. ^ Libertus, Klaus; Landa, Rebecca J.; Haworth, Joshua L. (17 November 2017). "Development of Attention to Faces during the First 3 Years: Influences of Stimulus Type". Frontiers in Psychology. 8: 1976. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2017.01976. PMC 5698271. PMID 29204130.
  13. ^ Maurer, D. (1985). "Infants' Perception of Facedness". In Field, Tiffany; Fox, Nathan A. (eds.). Social Perception in Infants. Ablex Publishing Corporation. pp. 73–100. ISBN 978-0-89391-231-4.
  14. ^ Morton, John; Johnson, Mark H. (1991). "CONSPEC and CONLERN: A two-process theory of infant face recognition". Psychological Review. 98 (2): 164–181. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.492.8978. doi:10.1037/0033-295x.98.2.164. PMID 2047512.
  15. ^ Fantz, Robert L. (May 1961). "The Origin of Form Perception". Scientific American. 204 (5): 66–73. Bibcode:1961SciAm.204e..66F. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0561-66. PMID 13698138.
  16. ^ Libertus, Klaus; Needham, Amy (November 2011). "Reaching experience increases face preference in 3-month-old infants: Face preference and motor experience". Developmental Science. 14 (6): 1355–1364. doi:10.1111/j.1467-7687.2011.01084.x. PMC 3888836. PMID 22010895.
  17. ^ Libertus, Klaus; Needham, Amy (November 2014). "Face preference in infancy and its relation to motor activity". International Journal of Behavioral Development. 38 (6): 529–538. doi:10.1177/0165025414535122. S2CID 19692579.
  18. ^ Tobias Grossmann; Striano; Friederici (May 2006). "Crossmodal integration of emotional information from face and voice in the infant brain". Developmental Science. 9 (3): 309–315. doi:10.1111/j.1467-7687.2006.00494.x. PMID 16669802. S2CID 41871753.
  19. ^ Farroni, Teresa; Menon, Enrica; Rigato, Silvia; Johnson, Mark H. (March 2007). "The perception of facial expressions in newborns". European Journal of Developmental Psychology. 4 (1): 2–13. doi:10.1080/17405620601046832. PMC 2836746. PMID 20228970.
  20. ^ a b c Stefanie Hoehl & Tricia Striano; Striano (November–December 2008). "Neural processing of eye gaze and threat-related emotional facial expressions in infancy". Child Development. 79 (6): 1752–1760. doi:10.1111/j.1467-8624.2008.01223.x. PMID 19037947. S2CID 766343.
  21. ^ Peltola, Mikko J.; Leppänen, Jukka M.; Mäki, Silja; Hietanen, Jari K. (1 June 2009). "Emergence of enhanced attention to fearful faces between 5 and 7 months of age". Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience. 4 (2): 134–142. doi:10.1093/scan/nsn046. PMC 2686224. PMID 19174536.
  22. ^ a b Leppanen, Jukka; Richmond, Jenny; Vogel-Farley, Vanessa; Moulson, Margaret; Nelson, Charles (May 2009). "Categorical representation of facial expressions in the infant brain". Infancy. 14 (3): 346–362. doi:10.1080/15250000902839393. PMC 2954432. PMID 20953267.
  23. ^ Tricia Striano & Amrisha Vaish; Vaish (2010). "Seven- to 9-month-old infants use facial expressions to interpret others' actions". British Journal of Developmental Psychology. 24 (4): 753–760. doi:10.1348/026151005X70319. S2CID 145375636.
  24. ^ Curby, K.M.; Johnson, K.J.; Tyson A. (2012). "Face to face with emotion: Holistic face processing is modulated by emotional state". Cognition and Emotion. 26 (1): 93–102. doi:10.1080/02699931.2011.555752. PMID 21557121. S2CID 26475009.
  25. ^ a b Jessen, Sarah; Altvater-Mackensen, Nicole; Grossmann, Tobias (1 May 2016). "Pupillary responses reveal infants' discrimination of facial emotions independent of conscious perception". Cognition. 150: 163–169. doi:10.1016/j.cognition.2016.02.010. PMID 26896901. S2CID 1096220.
  26. ^ Charles A. Nelson (March–June 2001). "The development and neural bases of face recognition". Infant and Child Development. 10 (1–2): 3–18. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.130.8912. doi:10.1002/icd.239.
  27. ^ a b Emi Nakato; Otsuka; Kanazawa; Yamaguchi; Kakigi (January 2011). "Distinct differences in the pattern of hemodynamic response to happy and angry facial expressions in infants--a near-infrared spectroscopic study". NeuroImage. 54 (2): 1600–1606. doi:10.1016/j.neuroimage.2010.09.021. PMID 20850548. S2CID 11147913.
  28. ^ Awasthi B; Friedman J; Williams, MA (2011). "Processing of low spatial frequency faces at periphery in choice reaching tasks". Neuropsychologia. 49 (7): 2136–41. doi:10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2011.03.003. PMID 21397615. S2CID 7501604.
  29. ^ O. Pascalis; Scott; Kelly; Shannon; Nicholson; Coleman; Nelson (April 2005). "Plasticity of face processing in infancy". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 102 (14): 5297–5300. Bibcode:2005PNAS..102.5297P. doi:10.1073/pnas.0406627102. PMC 555965. PMID 15790676.
  30. ^ a b Jeffery, L.; Rhodes, G. (2011). "Insights into the development of face recognition mechanisms revealed by face aftereffects". British Journal of Psychology. 102 (4): 799–815. doi:10.1111/j.2044-8295.2011.02066.x. PMID 21988385.
  31. ^ Klaus Libertus & Amy Needham; Needham (November 2011). "Reaching experience increases face preference in 3-month-old infants". Developmental Science. 14 (6): 1355–1364. doi:10.1111/j.1467-7687.2011.01084.x. PMC 3888836. PMID 22010895.
  32. ^ Field, T.; Woodson, R; Greenberg, R; Cohen, D (8 October 1982). "Discrimination and imitation of facial expression by neonates". Science. 218 (4568): 179–181. Bibcode:1982Sci...218..179F. doi:10.1126/science.7123230. PMID 7123230.
  33. ^ Jones, Susan S. (27 August 2009). "The development of imitation in infancy". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 364 (1528): 2325–2335. doi:10.1098/rstb.2009.0045. PMC 2865075. PMID 19620104.
  34. ^ a b c d e Liu, Jia; Harris, Alison; Kanwisher, Nancy (January 2010). "Perception of Face Parts and Face Configurations: An fMRI Study". Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience. 22 (1): 203–211. doi:10.1162/jocn.2009.21203. PMC 2888696. PMID 19302006.
  35. ^ a b c Rossion, B. (1 November 2003). "A network of occipito-temporal face-sensitive areas besides the right middle fusiform gyrus is necessary for normal face processing". Brain. 126 (11): 2381–2395. doi:10.1093/brain/awg241. PMID 12876150.
  36. ^ a b McCarthy, Gregory; Puce, Aina; Gore, John C.; Allison, Truett (October 1997). "Face-Specific Processing in the Human Fusiform Gyrus". Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience. 9 (5): 605–610. doi:10.1162/jocn.1997.9.5.605. hdl:2022/22741. PMID 23965119. S2CID 23333049.
  37. ^ Baldauf, D.; Desimone, R. (25 April 2014). "Neural Mechanisms of Object-Based Attention". Science. 344 (6182): 424–427. Bibcode:2014Sci...344..424B. doi:10.1126/science.1247003. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 24763592. S2CID 34728448.
  38. ^ a b c d e f g de Vries, Eelke; Baldauf, Daniel (1 October 2019). "Attentional Weighting in the Face Processing Network: A Magnetic Response Image-guided Magnetoencephalography Study Using Multiple Cyclic Entrainments". Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience. 31 (10): 1573–1588. doi:10.1162/jocn_a_01428. hdl:11572/252722. ISSN 0898-929X. PMID 31112470. S2CID 160012572.
  39. ^ Campbell, R.; Heywood, C.A.; Cowey, A.; Regard, M.; Landis, T. (January 1990). "Sensitivity to eye gaze in prosopagnosic patients and monkeys with superior temporal sulcus ablation". Neuropsychologia. 28 (11): 1123–1142. doi:10.1016/0028-3932(90)90050-x. PMID 2290489. S2CID 7723950.
  40. ^ Marquardt, Kira; Ramezanpour, Hamidreza; Dicke, Peter W.; Thier, Peter (March 2017). "Following Eye Gaze Activates a Patch in the Posterior Temporal Cortex That Is not Part of the Human 'Face Patch' System". eNeuro. 4 (2): ENEURO.0317–16.2017. doi:10.1523/ENEURO.0317-16.2017. PMC 5362938. PMID 28374010.
  41. ^ Tsujii, T.; Watanabe, S.; Hiraga, K.; Akiyama, T.; Ohira, T. (March 2005). "Testing holistic processing hypothesis in human and animal face perception: evidence from a magnetoencephalographic study". International Congress Series. 1278: 223–226. doi:10.1016/j.ics.2004.11.151.
  42. ^ Andreasen NC, O'Leary DS, Arndt S, et al. (1996). "Neural substrates of facial recognition". The Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences. 8 (2): 139–46. doi:10.1176/jnp.8.2.139. PMID 9081548.
  43. ^ Haxby, JV; Horwitz, B; Ungerleider, LG; Maisog, JM; Pietrini, P; Grady, CL (1 November 1994). "The functional organization of human extrastriate cortex: a PET-rCBF study of selective attention to faces and locations". The Journal of Neuroscience. 14 (11): 6336–6353. doi:10.1523/JNEUROSCI.14-11-06336.1994. PMC 6577268. PMID 7965040.
  44. ^ Haxby, James V; Ungerleider, Leslie G; Clark, Vincent P; Schouten, Jennifer L; Hoffman, Elizabeth A; Martin, Alex (January 1999). "The Effect of Face Inversion on Activity in Human Neural Systems for Face and Object Perception". Neuron. 22 (1): 189–199. doi:10.1016/S0896-6273(00)80690-X. PMID 10027301. S2CID 9525543.
  45. ^ Puce, Aina; Allison, Truett; Asgari, Maryam; Gore, John C.; McCarthy, Gregory (15 August 1996). "Differential Sensitivity of Human Visual Cortex to Faces, Letterstrings, and Textures: A Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study". The Journal of Neuroscience. 16 (16): 5205–5215. doi:10.1523/JNEUROSCI.16-16-05205.1996. PMC 6579313. PMID 8756449.
  46. ^ Puce, A.; Allison, T.; Gore, J. C.; McCarthy, G. (1 September 1995). "Face-sensitive regions in human extrastriate cortex studied by functional MRI". Journal of Neurophysiology. 74 (3): 1192–1199. doi:10.1152/jn.1995.74.3.1192. PMID 7500143.
  47. ^ Sergent, Justine; Ohta, Shinsuke; Macdonald, Brennan (1992). "Functional neuroanatomy of face and object processing. A positron emission tomography study". Brain. 115 (1): 15–36. doi:10.1093/brain/115.1.15. PMID 1559150.
  48. ^ KannurpattiRypmaBiswal, S.S.B.; Biswal, Bart; Bharat, B (March 2012). "Prediction of task-related BOLD fMRI with amplitude signatures of resting-state fMRI". Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience. 6: 7. doi:10.3389/fnsys.2012.00007. PMC 3294272. PMID 22408609.
  49. ^ a b c Gold, J.M.; Mundy, P.J.; Tjan, B.S. (2012). "The perception of a face is no more than the sum of its parts". Psychological Science. 23 (4): 427–434. doi:10.1177/0956797611427407. PMC 3410436. PMID 22395131.
  50. ^ Pitcher, D.; Walsh, V.; Duchaine, B. (2011). "The role of the occipital face area in the cortical face perception network". Experimental Brain Research. 209 (4): 481–493. doi:10.1007/s00221-011-2579-1. PMID 21318346. S2CID 6321920.
  51. ^ Arcurio, L.R.; Gold, J.M.; James, T.W. (2012). "The response of face-selective cortex with single face parts and part combinations". Neuropsychologia. 50 (10): 2454–2459. doi:10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2012.06.016. PMC 3423083. PMID 22750118.
  52. ^ Arcurio, L.R.; Gold, J.M.; James, T.W. (2012). "The response of face-selective cortex with single face parts and part combinations". Neuropsychologia. 50 (10): 2458. doi:10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2012.06.016. PMC 3423083. PMID 22750118.
  53. ^ Gorno-Tempini, M. L.; Price, CJ (1 October 2001). "Identification of famous faces and buildings: A functional neuroimaging study of semantically unique items". Brain. 124 (10): 2087–2097. doi:10.1093/brain/124.10.2087. PMID 11571224.
  54. ^ a b c d Vuilleumier, P; Pourtois, G (2007). "Distributed and interactive brain mechanisms during emotion face perception: Evidence from functional neuroimaging". Neuropsychologia. 45 (1): 174–194. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.410.2526. doi:10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2006.06.003. PMID 16854439. S2CID 5635384.
  55. ^ Platek, Steven M.; Kemp, Shelly M. (February 2009). "Is family special to the brain? An event-related fMRI study of familiar, familial, and self-face recognition". Neuropsychologia. 47 (3): 849–858. doi:10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2008.12.027. PMID 19159636. S2CID 12674158.
  56. ^ Ishai A; Ungerleider LG; Martin A; Schouten JL; Haxby JV (August 1999). "Distributed representation of objects in the human ventral visual pathway". Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 96 (16): 9379–84. Bibcode:1999PNAS...96.9379I. doi:10.1073/pnas.96.16.9379. PMC 17791. PMID 10430951.
  57. ^ Gauthier, Isabel (January 2000). "What constrains the organization of the ventral temporal cortex?". Trends in Cognitive Sciences. 4 (1): 1–2. doi:10.1016/s1364-6613(99)01416-3. PMID 10637614. S2CID 17347723.
  58. ^ Droste, D W; Harders, A G; Rastogi, E (August 1989). "A transcranial Doppler study of blood flow velocity in the middle cerebral arteries performed at rest and during mental activities". Stroke. 20 (8): 1005–1011. doi:10.1161/01.str.20.8.1005. PMID 2667197.
  59. ^ Harders, A. G.; Laborde, G.; Droste, D. W.; Rastogi, E. (January 1989). "Brain Activity and Blood flow Velocity Changes: A Transcranial Doppler Study". International Journal of Neuroscience. 47 (1–2): 91–102. doi:10.3109/00207458908987421. PMID 2676884.
  60. ^ Njemanze PC (September 2004). "Asymmetry in cerebral blood flow velocity with processing of facial images during head-down rest". Aviat Space Environ Med. 75 (9): 800–5. PMID 15460633.
  61. ^ a b Zheng, Xin; Mondloch, Catherine J.; Segalowitz, Sidney J. (June 2012). "The timing of individual face recognition in the brain". Neuropsychologia. 50 (7): 1451–1461. doi:10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2012.02.030. PMID 22410414. S2CID 207237508.
  62. ^ Eimer, M.; Gosling, A.; Duchaine, B. (2012). "Electrophysiological markers of covert face recognition in developmental prosopagnosia". Brain. 135 (2): 542–554. doi:10.1093/brain/awr347. PMID 22271660.
  63. ^ Moulson, M.C.; Balas, B.; Nelson, C.; Sinha, P. (2011). "EEG correlates of categorical and graded face perception". Neuropsychologia. 49 (14): 3847–3853. doi:10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2011.09.046. PMC 3290448. PMID 22001852.
  64. ^ Chang, Le; Tsao, Doris Y. (June 2017). "The Code for Facial Identity in the Primate Brain". Cell. 169 (6): 1013–1028.e14. doi:10.1016/j.cell.2017.05.011. PMC 8088389. PMID 28575666. S2CID 32432231.
  65. ^ Perceptual Expertise Network
  66. ^ "Evidence against the expertise hypothesis". Kanwisher Lab. 20 August 2007. Archived from the original on 20 August 2007. Retrieved 5 February 2024.
  67. ^ Gauthier, Isabel; Skudlarski, Pawel; Gore, John C.; Anderson, Adam W. (February 2000). "Expertise for cars and birds recruits brain areas involved in face recognition". Nature Neuroscience. 3 (2): 191–197. doi:10.1038/72140. PMID 10649576. S2CID 15752722.
  68. ^ Gauthier, Isabel; Tarr, Michael J.; Anderson, Adam W.; Skudlarski, Pawel; Gore, John C. (June 1999). "Activation of the middle fusiform 'face area' increases with expertise in recognizing novel objects". Nature Neuroscience. 2 (6): 568–573. doi:10.1038/9224. PMID 10448223. S2CID 9504895.
  69. ^ Grill-Spector, Kalanit; Knouf, Nicholas; Kanwisher, Nancy (May 2004). "The fusiform face area subserves face perception, not generic within-category identification". Nature Neuroscience. 7 (5): 555–562. doi:10.1038/nn1224. PMID 15077112. S2CID 2204107.
  70. ^ Xu Y (August 2005). "Revisiting the role of the fusiform face area in visual expertise". Cereb. Cortex. 15 (8): 1234–42. doi:10.1093/cercor/bhi006. PMID 15677350.
  71. ^ Righi G, Tarr MJ; Tarr (2004). "Are chess experts any different from face, bird, or greeble experts?". Journal of Vision. 4 (8): 504. doi:10.1167/4.8.504.
  72. ^ [1] Archived 28 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine My Brilliant Brain, partly about grandmaster Susan Polgar, shows brain scans of the fusiform gyrus while Polgar viewed chess diagrams.
  73. ^ Kung CC; Peissig JJ; Tarr MJ (December 2007). "Is region-of-interest overlap comparison a reliable measure of category specificity?". J Cogn Neurosci. 19 (12): 2019–34. doi:10.1162/jocn.2007.19.12.2019. PMID 17892386. S2CID 7864360. Archived from the original on 2 June 2021. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
  74. ^ a b Mansour, Jamal; Lindsay, Roderick (30 January 2010). "Facial Recognition". Corsini Encyclopedia of Psychology. Vol. 1–2. pp. 1–2. doi:10.1002/9780470479216.corpsy0342. ISBN 9780470479216.
  75. ^ Calderwood, L; Burton, A.M. (November 2006). "Children and adults recall the names of highly familiar faces faster than semantic information". British Journal of Psychology. 96 (4): 441–454. doi:10.1348/000712605X84124. PMID 17018182.
  76. ^ Ellis, Hadyn; Jones, Dylan; Mosdell, Nick (February 1997). "Intra- and Inter-modal repetition priming of familiar faces and voices". British Journal of Psychology. 88 (1): 143–156. doi:10.1111/j.2044-8295.1997.tb02625.x. PMID 9061895.
  77. ^ a b c Nadal, Lynn (2005). "Speaker Recognition". Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science. Vol. 4. pp. 142–145.
  78. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Bredart, S.; Barsics, C. (3 December 2012). "Recalling Semantic and Episodic Information From Faces and Voices: A Face Advantage". Current Directions in Psychological Science. 21 (6): 378–381. doi:10.1177/0963721412454876. hdl:2268/135794. S2CID 145337404.
  79. ^ a b c d Hanley, J. Richard; Damjanovic, Ljubica (November 2009). "It is more difficult to retrieve a familiar person's name and occupation from their voice than from their blurred face". Memory. 17 (8): 830–839. doi:10.1080/09658210903264175. PMID 19882434. S2CID 27070912.
  80. ^ Yarmey, Daniel A.; Yarmey, A. Linda; Yarmey, Meagan J. (1 January 1994). "Face and Voice Identifications in showups and lineups". Applied Cognitive Psychology. 8 (5): 453–464. doi:10.1002/acp.2350080504.
  81. ^ Van Lancker, Diana; Kreiman, Jody (January 1987). "Voice discrimination and recognition are separate abilities". Neuropsychologia. 25 (5): 829–834. doi:10.1016/0028-3932(87)90120-5. PMID 3431677. S2CID 15240833.
  82. ^ a b Barsics, Catherine; Brédart, Serge (June 2011). "Recalling episodic information about personally known faces and voices". Consciousness and Cognition. 20 (2): 303–308. doi:10.1016/j.concog.2010.03.008. PMID 20381380. S2CID 40812033.
  83. ^ Ethofer, Thomas; Belin Pascal; Salvatore Campanella, eds. (21 August 2012). Integrating face and voice in person perception. New York: Springer. ISBN 978-1-4614-3584-6.
  84. ^ a b Brédart, Serge; Barsics, Catherine; Hanley, Rick (November 2009). "Recalling semantic information about personally known faces and voices". European Journal of Cognitive Psychology. 21 (7): 1013–1021. doi:10.1080/09541440802591821. hdl:2268/27809. S2CID 1042153. Archived from the original on 2 June 2021. Retrieved 5 February 2019.
  85. ^ a b c d e Barsics, Catherine; Brédart, Serge (July 2012). "Recalling semantic information about newly learned faces and voices". Memory. 20 (5): 527–534. doi:10.1080/09658211.2012.683012. PMID 22646520. S2CID 23728924.
  86. ^ "Learning.". Encyclopedia of Insects. Oxford: Elsevier Science & Technology. Archived from the original on 2 June 2021. Retrieved 6 December 2013.
  87. ^ "Memory, Explicit and Implicit.". Encyclopedia of the Human Brain. Oxford: Elsevier Science & Technology. Archived from the original on 2 June 2021. Retrieved 6 December 2013.
  88. ^ "Episodic Memory, Computational Models of". Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science. Chichester, UK: John Wiley & Sons. 2005.
  89. ^ a b c d Leube, Dirk T.; Erb, Michael; Grodd, Wolfgang; Bartels, Mathias; Kircher, Tilo T.J. (December 2003). "Successful episodic memory retrieval of newly learned faces activates a left fronto-parietal network". Cognitive Brain Research. 18 (1): 97–101. doi:10.1016/j.cogbrainres.2003.09.008. PMID 14659501.
  90. ^ Hofer, Alex; Siedentopf, Christian M.; Ischebeck, Anja; Rettenbacher, Maria A.; Verius, Michael; Golaszewski, Stefan M.; Felber, Stephan; Fleischhacker, W. Wolfgang (March 2007). "Neural substrates for episodic encoding and recognition of unfamiliar faces". Brain and Cognition. 63 (2): 174–181. doi:10.1016/j.bandc.2006.11.005. PMID 17207899. S2CID 42077795.
  91. ^ "Face Perception, Neural Basis of". Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science. John Wiley & Sons. 2005.
  92. ^ "Face Perception, Psychology of". Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science. John Wiley & Sons. 2005.
  93. ^ a b c d e f Soria Bauser, D; Thoma, P; Aizenberg, V; Brüne, M; Juckel, G; Daum, I (2012). "Face and body perception in schizophrenia: A configural processing deficit?". Psychiatry Research. 195 (1–2): 9–17. doi:10.1016/j.psychres.2011.07.017. PMID 21803427. S2CID 6137252.
  94. ^ a b Lawrence, Kate; Kuntsi, Joanna; Coleman, Michael; Campbell, Ruth; Skuse, David (2003). "Face and emotion recognition deficits in Turner syndrome: A possible role for X-linked genes in amygdala development". Neuropsychology. 17 (1): 39–49. doi:10.1037/0894-4105.17.1.39. PMID 12597072.
  95. ^ Sugiura, Motoaki (2011). "The multi-layered model of self: a social neuroscience perspective". New Frontiers in Social Cognitive Neuroscience. Tohoku University Press: 111–135.
  96. ^ Sugiura, Motoaki (2014). "Three FAces of Self-Face Recognition: Potential for a Multi-Dimensional Diagnostic Tool". Neuroscience Research. 90: 56–64. doi:10.1016/j.neures.2014.10.002. PMID 25450313. S2CID 13292035. Archived from the original on 22 April 2021. Retrieved 22 April 2021 – via Research Gate.
  97. ^ Gallup, GG Jr. (1970). "Chimpanzees: Self recognition". Science. 167 (3914): 86–87. Bibcode:1970Sci...167...86G. doi:10.1126/science.167.3914.86. PMID 4982211. S2CID 145295899.
  98. ^ Everhart DE; Shucard JL; Quatrin T; Shucard DW (July 2001). "Sex-related differences in event-related potentials, face recognition, and facial affect processing in prepubertal children". Neuropsychology. 15 (3): 329–41. doi:10.1037/0894-4105.15.3.329. PMID 11499988.
  99. ^ Herlitz A, Yonker JE; Yonker (February 2002). "Sex differences in episodic memory: the influence of intelligence". J Clin Exp Neuropsychol. 24 (1): 107–14. doi:10.1076/jcen.24.1.107.970. PMID 11935429. S2CID 26683095.
  100. ^ Smith WM (July 2000). "Hemispheric and facial asymmetry: gender differences". Laterality. 5 (3): 251–8. doi:10.1080/713754376. PMID 15513145. S2CID 25349709.
  101. ^ Voyer D; Voyer S; Bryden MP (March 1995). "Magnitude of sex differences in spatial abilities: a meta-analysis and consideration of critical variables". Psychol Bull. 117 (2): 250–70. doi:10.1037/0033-2909.117.2.250. PMID 7724690.
  102. ^ Hausmann M (2005). "Hemispheric asymmetry in spatial attention across the menstrual cycle". Neuropsychologia. 43 (11): 1559–67. doi:10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2005.01.017. PMID 16009238. S2CID 17133930.
  103. ^ De Renzi E (1986). "Prosopagnosia in two patients with CT scan evidence of damage confined to the right hemisphere". Neuropsychologia. 24 (3): 385–9. doi:10.1016/0028-3932(86)90023-0. PMID 3736820. S2CID 53181659.
  104. ^ De Renzi E; Perani D; Carlesimo GA; Silveri MC; Fazio F (August 1994). "Prosopagnosia can be associated with damage confined to the right hemisphere--an MRI and PET study and a review of the literature". Neuropsychologia. 32 (8): 893–902. doi:10.1016/0028-3932(94)90041-8. PMID 7969865. S2CID 45526094.
  105. ^ Mattson AJ; Levin HS; Grafman J (February 2000). "A case of prosopagnosia following moderate closed head injury with left hemisphere focal lesion". Cortex. 36 (1): 125–37. doi:10.1016/S0010-9452(08)70841-4. PMID 10728902. S2CID 4480823.
  106. ^ Gorno-Tempini, M. L. (1 October 2001). "Identification of famous faces and buildings: A functional neuroimaging study of semantically unique items". Brain. 124 (10): 2087–2097. doi:10.1093/brain/124.10.2087. ISSN 1460-2156. PMID 11571224.
  107. ^ Barton JJ, Cherkasova M; Cherkasova (July 2003). "Face imagery and its relation to perception and covert recognition in prosopagnosia". Neurology. 61 (2): 220–5. doi:10.1212/01.WNL.0000071229.11658.F8. PMID 12874402. S2CID 42156497.
  108. ^ Sprengelmeyer, R.; Rausch, M.; Eysel, U. T.; Przuntek, H. (22 October 1998). "Neural structures associated with recognition of facial expressions of basic emotions". Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences. 265 (1409): 1927–1931. doi:10.1098/rspb.1998.0522. PMC 1689486. PMID 9821359.
  109. ^ Verstichel, Patrick (March 2001). "Troubles de la reconnaissance des visages : reconnaissance implicite, sentiment de familiarité, rôle de chaque hémisphère" [Impaired recognition of faces: implicit recognition, feeling of familiarity, role of each hemisphere]. Bulletin de l'Académie Nationale de Médecine (in French). 185 (3): 537–553. doi:10.1016/S0001-4079(19)34538-8. PMID 11501262.
  110. ^ Nakamura, K.; Kawashima, R; Sato, N; Nakamura, A; Sugiura, M; Kato, T; Hatano, K; Ito, K; Fukuda, H; Schormann, T; Zilles, K (1 September 2000). "Functional delineation of the human occipito-temporal areas related to face and scene processing: A PET study". Brain. 123 (9): 1903–1912. doi:10.1093/brain/123.9.1903. PMID 10960054.
  111. ^ Gur, Ruben C.; Jaggi, Jurg L.; Ragland, J. Daniel; Resnick, Susan M.; Shtasel, Derri; Muenz, Larry; Gur, Raquel E. (January 1993). "Effects of Memory Processing on Regional Brain Activation: Cerebral Blood Flow in Normal Subjects". International Journal of Neuroscience. 72 (1–2): 31–44. doi:10.3109/00207459308991621. PMID 8225798.
  112. ^ Ojemann, Jeffrey G.; Ojemann, George A.; Lettich, Ettore (1992). "Neuronal activity related to faces and matching in human right nondominant temporal cortex". Brain. 115 (1): 1–13. doi:10.1093/brain/115.1.1. PMID 1559147.
  113. ^ Bogen JE (April 1969). "The other side of the brain. I. Dysgraphia and dyscopia following cerebral commissurotomy". Bull Los Angeles Neurol Soc. 34 (2): 73–105. PMID 5792283.
  114. ^ Bogen JE (1975). "Some educational aspects of hemispheric specialization". UCLA Educator. 17: 24–32.
  115. ^ Bradshaw JL, Nettleton NC; Nettleton (1981). "The nature of hemispheric specialization in man". Behavioral and Brain Sciences. 4: 51–91. doi:10.1017/S0140525X00007548. S2CID 145235366.
  116. ^ Galin D (October 1974). "Implications for psychiatry of left and right cerebral specialization. A neurophysiological context for unconscious processes". Arch. Gen. Psychiatry. 31 (4): 572–83. doi:10.1001/archpsyc.1974.01760160110022. PMID 4421063.[permanent dead link]
  117. ^ a b Njemanze PC (January 2007). "Cerebral lateralisation for facial processing: gender-related cognitive styles determined using Fourier analysis of mean cerebral blood flow velocity in the middle cerebral arteries". Laterality. 12 (1): 31–49. doi:10.1080/13576500600886796. PMID 17090448. S2CID 2964994.
  118. ^ Ishai, A.; Ungerleider, L. G.; Martin, A.; Schouten, J. L.; Haxby, J. V. (3 August 1999). "Distributed representation of objects in the human ventral visual pathway". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 96 (16): 9379–9384. Bibcode:1999PNAS...96.9379I. doi:10.1073/pnas.96.16.9379. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 17791. PMID 10430951.
  119. ^ Wang, Zhe; Quinn, Paul C.; Tanaka, James W.; Yu, Xiaoyang; Sun, Yu-Hao P.; Liu, Jiangang; Pascalis, Olivier; Ge, Liezhong; Lee, Kang (2015). "An other-race effect for configural and featural processing of faces: upper and lower face regions play different roles". Frontiers in Psychology. 6: 559. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00559. ISSN 1664-1078. PMC 4424811. PMID 26005427.
  120. ^ a b Feingold, C.A. (1914). "The influence of environment on identification of persons and things". Journal of Criminal Law and Police Science. 5 (1): 39–51. doi:10.2307/1133283. JSTOR 1133283. Archived from the original on 19 July 2018. Retrieved 5 February 2019.
  121. ^ Walker, P.M.; Tanaka, J.W. (2003). "An encoding advantage for own-race versus other-race faces". Perception. 32 (9): 1117–1125. doi:10.1068/p5098. PMID 14651324. S2CID 22723263.
  122. ^ a b c d Lindsay, D. Stephen; Jack, Philip C. Jr.; Christian, Christian A. (13 February 1991). "Other-race face perception" (PDF). Journal of Applied Psychology. 76 (4): 587–589. doi:10.1037/0021-9010.76.4.587. PMID 1917773. Archived (PDF) from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 30 September 2016.
  123. ^ Brigham & Karkowitz, 1978; Brigham & Williamson, 1979; cited in Shepherd, 1981
  124. ^ Chance, Goldstein, & McBride, 1975; Feinman & Entwistle, 1976; cited in Shepherd, 1981
  125. ^ Malpass & Kravitz, 1969; Cross, Cross, & Daly, 1971; Shepherd, Deregowski, & Ellis, 1974; all cited in Shepherd, 1981
  126. ^ Kelly, David J.; Quinn, Paul C.; Slater, Alan M.; Lee, Kang; Ge, Liezhong; Pascalis, Olivier (1 December 2007). "The other-race effect develops during infancy: Evidence of perceptual narrowing". Psychological Science. 18 (12): 1084–1089. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9280.2007.02029.x. PMC 2566514. PMID 18031416.
  127. ^ Sangrigoli, S.; Pallier, C.; Argenti, A.-M.; Ventureyra, V. a. G.; de Schonen, S. (1 June 2005). "Reversibility of the other-race effect in face recognition during childhood" (PDF). Psychological Science. 16 (6): 440–444. doi:10.1111/j.0956-7976.2005.01554.x. PMID 15943669. S2CID 5572690.
  128. ^ a b Walker, Pamela M; Tanaka, James W (1 September 2003). "An Encoding Advantage for Own-Race versus Other-Race Faces". Perception. 32 (9): 1117–1125. doi:10.1068/p5098. ISSN 0301-0066. PMID 14651324. S2CID 22723263.
  129. ^ Walker, Pamela M.; Hewstone, Miles (2006). "A developmental investigation of other-race contact and the own-race face effect". British Journal of Developmental Psychology. 24 (3): 451–463. doi:10.1348/026151005X51239. ISSN 2044-835X.
  130. ^ de Gutis, Joseph; Mercado, Rogelio J.; Wilmer, Jeremy; Rosenblatt, Andrew (10 April 2013). "Individual differences in holistic processing predict the own-race advantage in recognition memory". PLOS ONE. 8 (4): e58253. Bibcode:2013PLoSO...858253D. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0058253. PMC 3622684. PMID 23593119.
  131. ^ Diamond & Carey, 1986; Rhodes et al., 1989
  132. ^ Levin, Daniel T. (December 2000). "Race as a visual feature: Using visual search and perceptual discrimination tasks to understand face categories and the cross-race recognition deficit". J Exp Psychol Gen. 129 (4): 559–574. doi:10.1037/0096-3445.129.4.559. PMID 11142869.; Senholzi KB, Ito TA. Structural face encoding: How task affects the N170's sensitivity to race. Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci. 2013 Dec;8(8):937-42. doi: 10.1093/scan/nss091. Epub 2012 Sep 5. PMID: 22956666; PMCID: PMC3831558.
  133. ^ Bernstein, Michael J.; Young, Steven G.; Hugenberg, Kurt (August 2007). "The Cross-Category Effect: Mere Social Categorization Is Sufficient to Elicit an Own-Group Bias in Face Recognition". Psychological Science. 18 (8): 706–712. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9280.2007.01964.x. PMID 17680942. S2CID 747276.
  134. ^ Rehnman, J.; Herlitz, A. (April 2006). "Higher face recognition ability in girls: Magnified by own-sex and own-ethnicity bias". Memory. 14 (3): 289–296. doi:10.1080/09658210500233581. PMID 16574585. S2CID 46188393.
  135. ^ Hugenberg, Kurt; Miller, Jennifer; Claypool, Heather M. (1 March 2007). "Categorization and individuation in the cross-race recognition deficit: Toward a solution to an insidious problem". Journal of Experimental Social Psychology. 43 (2): 334–340. doi:10.1016/j.jesp.2006.02.010.
  136. ^ a b c Tanaka, J.W.; Lincoln, S.; Hegg, L. (2003). "A framework for the study and treatment of face processing deficits in autism". In Schwarzer, G.; Leder, H. (eds.). The development of face processing. Ohio: Hogrefe & Huber Publishers. pp. 101–119. ISBN 9780889372641.
  137. ^ a b Behrmann, Marlene; Avidan, Galia; Leonard, Grace Lee; Kimchi, Rutie; Luna, Beatriz; Humphreys, Kate; Minshew, Nancy (January 2006). "Configural processing in autism and its relationship to face processing". Neuropsychologia. 44 (1): 110–129. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.360.7141. doi:10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2005.04.002. PMID 15907952. S2CID 6407530.
  138. ^ Schreibman, Laura (1988). Autism. Newbury Park: Sage Publications. pp. 14–47. ISBN 978-0803928091.
  139. ^ a b c d Weigelt, Sarah; Koldewyn, Kami; Kanwisher, Nancy (2012). "Face identity recognition in autism spectrum disorders: A review of behavioral studies". Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews. 36 (3): 1060–1084. doi:10.1016/j.neubiorev.2011.12.008. PMID 22212588. S2CID 13909935.
  140. ^ a b c d e Dawson, Geraldine; Webb, Sara Jane; McPartland, James (2005). "Understanding the nature of face processing impairment in autism: Insights from behavioral and electrophysiological studies". Developmental Neuropsychology. 27 (3): 403–424. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.519.8390. doi:10.1207/s15326942dn2703_6. PMID 15843104. S2CID 2566676.
  141. ^ a b Kita, Yosuke; Inagaki, Masumi (2012). "Face recognition in patients with Autism Spectrum Disorder". Brain and Nerve. 64 (7): 821–831. PMID 22764354.
  142. ^ a b c d e f Grelotti, David J.; Gauthier, Isabel; Schultz, Robert T. (April 2002). "Social interest and the development of cortical face specialization: What autism teaches us about face processing". Developmental Psychobiology. 40 (3): 213–225. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.20.4786. doi:10.1002/dev.10028. PMID 11891634.
  143. ^ a b Riby, Deborah; Doherty-Sneddon Gwyneth; Bruce, Vicki (2009). "The eyes or the mouth? Feature salience and unfamiliar face processing in Williams syndrome and autism". The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology. 62 (1): 189–203. doi:10.1080/17470210701855629. hdl:1893/394. PMID 18609381. S2CID 7505424.
  144. ^ Joseph, Robert; Tanaka, James (2003). "Holistic and part-based face recognition in children with autism". Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry. 44 (4): 529–542. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.558.7877. doi:10.1111/1469-7610.00142. PMID 12751845.
  145. ^ a b Langdell, Tim (July 1978). "Recognition of Faces: An approach to the study of autism". Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry. 19 (3): 255–268. doi:10.1111/j.1469-7610.1978.tb00468.x. PMID 681468.
  146. ^ Spezio, Michael; Adolphs, Ralph; Hurley, Robert; Piven, Joseph (28 September 2006). "Abnormal use of facial information in high functioning autism". Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders. 37 (5): 929–939. doi:10.1007/s10803-006-0232-9. PMID 17006775. S2CID 13972633.
  147. ^ Revlin, Russell (2013). Cognition: Theory and Practice. Worth Publishers. pp. 98–101. ISBN 9780716756675.
  148. ^ Triesch, Jochen; Teuscher, Christof; Deak, Gedeon O.; Carlson, Eric (2006). "Gaze following: Why (not) learn it?". Developmental Science. 9 (2): 125–157. doi:10.1111/j.1467-7687.2006.00470.x. PMID 16472311. Archived from the original on 9 October 2017. Retrieved 5 February 2019.
  149. ^ Volkmar, Fred; Chawarska, Kasia; Klin, Ami (2005). "Autism in infancy and early childhood". Annual Review of Psychology. 56: 315–316. doi:10.1146/annurev.psych.56.091103.070159. PMID 15709938.
  150. ^ Nader-Grosbois, N.; Day, J.M. (2011). "Emotional cognition: theory of mind and face recognition". In Matson, J.L.; Sturmey, R. (eds.). International handbook of autism and pervasive developmental disorders. New York: Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 127–157. ISBN 9781441980649.
  151. ^ a b Pierce, K.; Müller, RA; Ambrose, J; Allen, G; Courchesne, E (1 October 2001). "Face processing occurs outside the fusiform 'face area' in autism: evidence from functional MRI". Brain. 124 (10): 2059–2073. doi:10.1093/brain/124.10.2059. PMID 11571222.
  152. ^ a b Harms, Madeline B.; Martin, Alex; Wallace, Gregory L. (September 2010). "Facial Emotion Recognition in Autism Spectrum Disorders: A Review of Behavioral and Neuroimaging Studies". Neuropsychology Review. 20 (3): 290–322. doi:10.1007/s11065-010-9138-6. PMID 20809200. S2CID 24696402.
  153. ^ Wright, Barry; Clarke, Natalie; Jordan, Jo; Young, Andrew W.; Clarke, Paula; Miles, Jeremy; Nation, Kate; Clarke, Leesa; Williams, Christine (November 2008). "Emotion recognition in faces and the use of visual context Vo in young people with high-functioning autism spectrum disorders". Autism. 12 (6): 607–626. doi:10.1177/1362361308097118. PMID 19005031. S2CID 206714766.
  154. ^ a b c Megreya, Ahmed M. (2016). "Face perception in schizophrenia: A specific deficit". Cognitive Neuropsychiatry. 21 (1): 60–72. doi:10.1080/13546805.2015.1133407. PMID 26816133. S2CID 26125559.
  155. ^ a b Onitsuka, Toshiaki; Niznikiewicz, Margaret A.; Spencer, Kevin M.; Frumin, Melissa; Kuroki, Noriomi; Lucia, Lisa C.; Shenton, Martha E.; McCarley, Robert W. (March 2006). "Functional and Structural Deficits in Brain Regions Subserving Face Perception in Schizophrenia". American Journal of Psychiatry. 163 (3): 455–462. doi:10.1176/appi.ajp.163.3.455. PMC 2773688. PMID 16513867.
  156. ^ a b c d Tang, D. Y.; Liu, A. C.; Lui, S. S.; Lam, B. Y.; Siu, B. W.; Lee, T. M.; Cheung, E. F. (2016). "Facial emotion perception impairments in schizophrenia patients with comorbid antisocial personality disorder". Psychiatry Research. 236: 22–7. doi:10.1016/j.psychres.2016.01.005. PMID 26778631. S2CID 6029349.
  157. ^ Megreya, Ahmed M. (2 January 2016). "Face perception in schizophrenia: a specific deficit". Cognitive Neuropsychiatry. 21 (1): 60–72. doi:10.1080/13546805.2015.1133407. PMID 26816133. S2CID 26125559.
  158. ^ Lar⊘i, Frank; D'Argembeau, Arnaud; Brédart, Serge; van der Linden, Martial (November 2007). "Face recognition failures in schizotypy". Cognitive Neuropsychiatry. 12 (6): 554–571. doi:10.1080/13546800701707223. hdl:2268/1432. PMID 17978939. S2CID 42925862.
  159. ^ Bortolon, Catherine; Capdevielle, Delphine; Altman, Rosalie; Macgregor, Alexandra; Attal, Jérôme; Raffard, Stéphane (July 2017). "Mirror self-face perception in individuals with schizophrenia: Feelings of strangeness associated with one's own image". Psychiatry Research. 253: 205–210. doi:10.1016/j.psychres.2017.03.055. PMID 28390296. S2CID 207453912.
  160. ^ "Sheep are able to recognise human faces from photographs". University of Cambridge. 8 November 2017. Archived from the original on 30 August 2019. Retrieved 8 November 2017.
  161. ^ Rincon, Paul (8 November 2017). "Sheep 'can recognise human faces'". BBC News. Archived from the original on 3 June 2019. Retrieved 8 November 2017.
  162. ^ a b Wasserman, Edward A (December 2016). "Face facts: Even nonhuman animals discriminate human faces". Learning & Behavior. 44 (4): 307–308. doi:10.3758/s13420-016-0239-9. PMID 27421848. S2CID 8331130.
  163. ^ a b Njemanze, P.C. Transcranial doppler spectroscopy for assessment of brain cognitive functions. United States Patent Application No. 20040158155, 12 August 2004
  164. ^ Njemanze, P.C. Noninvasive transcranial doppler ultrasound face and object recognition testing system. United States Patent No. 6,773,400, 10 August 2004
  165. ^ YangJing Long (2009). "Human age estimation by metric learning for regression problems" (PDF). Proc. International Conference on Computer Analysis of Images and Patterns: 74–82. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 January 2010.
  166. ^ Nemrodov, Dan; Behrmann, Marlene; Niemeier, Matthias; Drobotenko, Natalia; Nestor, Adrian (1 January 2019). "Multimodal evidence on shape and surface information in individual face processing". NeuroImage. 184: 813–825. doi:10.1016/j.neuroimage.2018.09.083. ISSN 1053-8119. PMID 30291975. S2CID 207211751. Archived from the original on 15 May 2021. Retrieved 2 June 2021.
  167. ^ a b c Wilmer, J. B.; Germine, L.; Chabris, C. F.; Chatterjee, G.; Williams, M.; Loken, E.; Nakayama, K.; Duchaine, B. (16 March 2010). "Human face recognition ability is specific and highly heritable". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 107 (11): 5238–5241. Bibcode:2010PNAS..107.5238W. doi:10.1073/pnas.0913053107. PMC 2841913. PMID 20176944.
  168. ^ Zhu, Qi; Song, Yiying; Hu, Siyuan; Li, Xiaobai; Tian, Moqian; Zhen, Zonglei; Dong, Qi; Kanwisher, Nancy; Liu, Jia (January 2010). "Heritability of the Specific Cognitive Ability of Face Perception". Current Biology. 20 (2): 137–142. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2009.11.067. hdl:1721.1/72376. PMID 20060296. S2CID 8390495.
  169. ^ a b Shakeshaft, Nicholas G.; Plomin, Robert (13 October 2015). "Genetic specificity of face recognition". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 112 (41): 12887–12892. Bibcode:2015PNAS..11212887S. doi:10.1073/pnas.1421881112. PMC 4611634. PMID 26417086.
  170. ^ a b c d Cattaneo, Zaira; Daini, Roberta; Malaspina, Manuela; Manai, Federico; Lillo, Mariarita; Fermi, Valentina; Schiavi, Susanna; Suchan, Boris; Comincini, Sergio (December 2016). "Congenital prosopagnosia is associated with a genetic variation in the oxytocin receptor (OXTR) gene: An exploratory study". Neuroscience. 339: 162–173. doi:10.1016/j.neuroscience.2016.09.040. PMID 27693815. S2CID 37038809.
  171. ^ Kennerknecht, Ingo; Grueter, Thomas; Welling, Brigitte; Wentzek, Sebastian; Horst, Jürgen; Edwards, Steve; Grueter, Martina (1 August 2006). "First report of prevalence of non-syndromic hereditary prosopagnosia (HPA)". American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A. 140A (15): 1617–1622. doi:10.1002/ajmg.a.31343. PMID 16817175. S2CID 2401.
  172. ^ Melchers, Martin; Montag, Christian; Markett, Sebastian; Reuter, Martin (2013). "Relationship between oxytocin receptor genotype and recognition of facial emotion". Behavioral Neuroscience. 127 (5): 780–787. doi:10.1037/a0033748. PMID 24128365.
  173. ^ Westberg, Lars; Henningsson, Susanne; Zettergren, Anna; Svärd, Joakim; Hovey, Daniel; Lin, Tian; Ebner, Natalie C.; Fischer, Håkan (22 September 2016). "Variation in the Oxytocin Receptor Gene Is Associated with Face Recognition and its Neural Correlates". Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience. 10: 178. doi:10.3389/fnbeh.2016.00178. PMC 5031602. PMID 27713694.
  174. ^ O'Toole, Alice J; Peterson, Jennifer; Deffenbacher, Kenneth A (June 1996). "An 'other-Race Effect' for Categorizing Faces by Sex". Perception. 25 (6): 669–676. doi:10.1068/p250669. ISSN 0301-0066. PMID 8888300. S2CID 7191979.
  175. ^ Wild, Heather A.; Barrett, Susan E.; Spence, Melanie J.; O'Toole, Alice J.; Cheng, Yi D.; Brooke, Jessica (December 2000). "Recognition and Sex Categorization of Adults' and Children's Faces: Examining Performance in the Absence of Sex-Stereotyped Cues". Journal of Experimental Child Psychology. 77 (4): 269–291. doi:10.1006/jecp.1999.2554. PMID 11063629.
  176. ^ a b Stephen, Ian D.; Coetzee, Vinet; Perrett, David I. (May 2011). "Carotenoid and melanin pigment coloration affect perceived human health". Evolution and Human Behavior. 32 (3): 216–227. doi:10.1016/j.evolhumbehav.2010.09.003.
  177. ^ Antar, Joseph C.; Stephen, Ian D. (2021-07-01). "Facial shape provides a valid cue to sociosexuality in men but not women". Evolution and Human Behavior. 42 (4): 361–370. doi:10.1016/j.evolhumbehav.2021.02.001. ISSN 1090-5138. S2CID 233919468.
  178. ^ Oosterhof, Nikolaas N.; Todorov, Alexander (2008-08-12). "The functional basis of face evaluation". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 105 (32): 11087–11092. Bibcode:2008PNAS..10511087O. doi:10.1073/pnas.0805664105. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 2516255. PMID 18685089.
  179. ^ Jones, Benedict C.; DeBruine, Lisa M.; Flake, Jessica K.; Liuzza, Marco Tullio; Antfolk, Jan; Arinze, Nwadiogo C.; Ndukaihe, Izuchukwu L. G.; Bloxsom, Nicholas G.; Lewis, Savannah C.; Foroni, Francesco; Willis, Megan L.; Cubillas, Carmelo P.; Vadillo, Miguel A.; Turiegano, Enrique; Gilead, Michael (January 2021). "To which world regions does the valence–dominance model of social perception apply?". Nature Human Behaviour. 5 (1): 159–169. doi:10.1038/s41562-020-01007-2. hdl:10037/23933. ISSN 2397-3374. PMID 33398150. S2CID 229298679.
  180. ^ Tzschaschel, Eva; Brooks, Kevin R.; Stephen, Ian D. (2022). "The valence-dominance model applies to body perception". Royal Society Open Science. 9 (9): 220594. Bibcode:2022RSOS....920594T. doi:10.1098/rsos.220594. PMC 9449465. PMID 36133152.

Further reading[edit]

  • Bruce, V. and Young, A. (2000) In the Eye of the Beholder: The Science of Face Perception. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-852439-0

External links[edit]