Controlling for interstimulus perceptual variance abolishes N170 face selectivity

被引:0
|
作者
Guillaume Thierry
Clara D Martin
Paul Downing
Alan J Pegna
机构
[1] School of Psychology,
[2] Brigantia Building,undefined
[3] Penrallt Road,undefined
[4] University of Wales,undefined
[5] Laboratoire Langage Cerveau et Cognition,undefined
[6] Institut des Sciences Cognitives,undefined
[7] Université de Lyon,undefined
[8] CNRS,undefined
[9] 67,undefined
[10] boulevard Pinel,undefined
[11] Laboratory of Experimental Neuropsychology,undefined
[12] Neuropsychology Unit,undefined
[13] Neurology Clinic,undefined
[14] Geneva University Hospital,undefined
[15] 24,undefined
[16] Rue Micheli du Crest,undefined
来源
Nature Neuroscience | 2007年 / 10卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Establishing when and how the human brain differentiates between object categories is key to understanding visual cognition. Event-related potential (ERP) investigations have led to the consensus that faces selectively elicit a negative wave peaking 170 ms after presentation, the 'N170'. In such experiments, however, faces are nearly always presented from a full front view, whereas other stimuli are more perceptually variable, leading to uncontrolled interstimulus perceptual variance (ISPV). Here, we compared ERPs elicited by faces, cars and butterflies while—for the first time—controlling ISPV (low or high). Surprisingly, the N170 was sensitive, not to object category, but to ISPV. In addition, we found category effects independent of ISPV 70 ms earlier than has been generally reported. These results demonstrate early ERP category effects in the visual domain, call into question the face selectivity of the N170 and establish ISPV as a critical factor to control in experiments relying on multitrial averaging.
引用
收藏
页码:505 / 511
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Face-specific N170 component is modulated by facial color
    Nakajima, Kae
    Minami, Tetsuto
    Nakauchi, Shigeki
    NEUROSCIENCE RESEARCH, 2010, 68 : E270 - E270
  • [42] THE N170 DURING EMOTIONAL FACE PROCESSING AND ATTENTION: A DEVELOPMENTAL PERSPECTIVE
    Berthod, Samantha
    O'Toole, Laura
    DeCiccio, Jennifer
    Dennis, Tracy A.
    PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 2011, 48 : S58 - S58
  • [43] Selectivity of N170 in the left hemisphere as an electrophysiological marker for expertise in reading Chinese
    Zhao, Jing
    Li, Su
    Lin, Si-En
    Cao, Xiao-Hua
    He, Sheng
    Weng, Xu-Chu
    NEUROSCIENCE BULLETIN, 2012, 28 (05) : 577 - 584
  • [44] Selectivity of N170 in the left hemisphere as an electrophysiological marker for expertise in reading Chinese
    Jing Zhao
    Su Li
    Si-En Lin
    Xiao-Hua Cao
    Sheng He
    Xu-Chu Weng
    Neuroscience Bulletin, 2012, 28 : 577 - 584
  • [45] Face-specific N170 component is modulated by facial expressional change
    Miyoshi, M
    Katayama, J
    Morotomi, T
    PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 2003, 40 : S61 - S61
  • [46] Face-specific N170 component is modulated by facial expressional change
    Miyoshi, M
    Katayama, J
    Morotomi, T
    NEUROREPORT, 2004, 15 (05) : 911 - 914
  • [47] The face-specific N170 component is modulated by emotional facial expression
    Blau, Vera C.
    Maurer, Urs
    Tottenham, Nim
    McCandliss, Bruce D.
    BEHAVIORAL AND BRAIN FUNCTIONS, 2007, 3
  • [48] The N170 is Sensitive to Long-term (Personal) Familiarity of a Face Identity
    Caharel, Stephanie
    Rossion, Bruno
    NEUROSCIENCE, 2021, 458 : 244 - 255
  • [49] Accounts for the N170 face-effect: A reply to Rossion, Curran, & Gauthier
    Bentin, S
    Carmel, D
    COGNITION, 2002, 85 (02) : 197 - 202
  • [50] Memory sensitivity of the N170 face effect: An artificial neural network approach
    Graham, R
    Dawson, M
    JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 2002, : 115 - 115