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Local Discriminability Determines the Strength of Holistic Processing for Faces in the Fusiform Face Area

Recent evidence suggests that the Fusiform Face Area (FFA) is not exclusively dedicated to the interactive processing of face features, but also contains neurons sensitive to local features. This suggests the existence of both interactive and local processing modes, consistent with recent behavioral...

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Autores principales: Goffaux, Valerie, Schiltz, Christine, Mur, Marieke, Goebel, Rainer
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3539162/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23316180
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2012.00604
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author Goffaux, Valerie
Schiltz, Christine
Mur, Marieke
Goebel, Rainer
author_facet Goffaux, Valerie
Schiltz, Christine
Mur, Marieke
Goebel, Rainer
author_sort Goffaux, Valerie
collection PubMed
description Recent evidence suggests that the Fusiform Face Area (FFA) is not exclusively dedicated to the interactive processing of face features, but also contains neurons sensitive to local features. This suggests the existence of both interactive and local processing modes, consistent with recent behavioral findings that the strength of interactive feature processing (IFP) engages most strongly when similar features need to be disambiguated. Here we address whether the engagement of the FFA into interactive versus featural representational modes is governed by local feature discriminability. We scanned human participants while they matched target features within face pairs, independently of the context of distracter features. IFP was operationalized as the failure to match the target without being distracted by distracter features. Picture-plane inversion was used to disrupt IFP while preserving input properties. We found that FFA activation was comparably strong, irrespective of whether similar target features were embedded in dissimilar contexts(i.e., inducing robust IFP) or dissimilar target features were embedded in the same context (i.e., engaging local processing). Second, inversion decreased FFA activation to faces most robustly when similar target features were embedded in dissimilar contexts, indicating that FFA engages into IFP mainly when features cannot be disambiguated at a local level. Third, by means of Spearman rank correlation tests, we show that the local processing of feature differences in the FFA is supported to a large extent by the Occipital Face Area, the Lateral Occipital Complex, and early visual cortex, suggesting that these regions encode the local aspects of face information. The present findings confirm the co-existence of holistic and featural representations in the FFA. Furthermore, they establish FFA as the main contributor to the featural/holistic representational mode switches determined by local discriminability.
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spelling pubmed-35391622013-01-11 Local Discriminability Determines the Strength of Holistic Processing for Faces in the Fusiform Face Area Goffaux, Valerie Schiltz, Christine Mur, Marieke Goebel, Rainer Front Psychol Psychology Recent evidence suggests that the Fusiform Face Area (FFA) is not exclusively dedicated to the interactive processing of face features, but also contains neurons sensitive to local features. This suggests the existence of both interactive and local processing modes, consistent with recent behavioral findings that the strength of interactive feature processing (IFP) engages most strongly when similar features need to be disambiguated. Here we address whether the engagement of the FFA into interactive versus featural representational modes is governed by local feature discriminability. We scanned human participants while they matched target features within face pairs, independently of the context of distracter features. IFP was operationalized as the failure to match the target without being distracted by distracter features. Picture-plane inversion was used to disrupt IFP while preserving input properties. We found that FFA activation was comparably strong, irrespective of whether similar target features were embedded in dissimilar contexts(i.e., inducing robust IFP) or dissimilar target features were embedded in the same context (i.e., engaging local processing). Second, inversion decreased FFA activation to faces most robustly when similar target features were embedded in dissimilar contexts, indicating that FFA engages into IFP mainly when features cannot be disambiguated at a local level. Third, by means of Spearman rank correlation tests, we show that the local processing of feature differences in the FFA is supported to a large extent by the Occipital Face Area, the Lateral Occipital Complex, and early visual cortex, suggesting that these regions encode the local aspects of face information. The present findings confirm the co-existence of holistic and featural representations in the FFA. Furthermore, they establish FFA as the main contributor to the featural/holistic representational mode switches determined by local discriminability. Frontiers Media S.A. 2013-01-08 /pmc/articles/PMC3539162/ /pubmed/23316180 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2012.00604 Text en Copyright © 2013 Goffaux, Schiltz, Mur and Goebel. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in other forums, provided the original authors and source are credited and subject to any copyright notices concerning any third-party graphics etc.
spellingShingle Psychology
Goffaux, Valerie
Schiltz, Christine
Mur, Marieke
Goebel, Rainer
Local Discriminability Determines the Strength of Holistic Processing for Faces in the Fusiform Face Area
title Local Discriminability Determines the Strength of Holistic Processing for Faces in the Fusiform Face Area
title_full Local Discriminability Determines the Strength of Holistic Processing for Faces in the Fusiform Face Area
title_fullStr Local Discriminability Determines the Strength of Holistic Processing for Faces in the Fusiform Face Area
title_full_unstemmed Local Discriminability Determines the Strength of Holistic Processing for Faces in the Fusiform Face Area
title_short Local Discriminability Determines the Strength of Holistic Processing for Faces in the Fusiform Face Area
title_sort local discriminability determines the strength of holistic processing for faces in the fusiform face area
topic Psychology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3539162/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23316180
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2012.00604
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