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The role of configurality in the Thatcher illusion: an ERP study

The role of configurality in the Thatcher illusion: an ERP study
The role of configurality in the Thatcher illusion: an ERP study
The Thatcher illusion (Thompson in Perception, 9, 483-484, 1980) is often explained as resulting from recognising a distortion of configural information when 'Thatcherised' faces are upright but not when inverted. However, recent behavioural studies suggest that there is an absence of perceptual configurality in upright Thatcherised faces (Donnelly et al. in Attention, Perception & Psychophysics, 74, 1475-1487, 2012) and both perceptual and decisional sources of configurality in behavioural tasks with Thatcherised stimuli (Mestry, Menneer et al. in Frontiers in Psychology, 3, 456, 2012). To examine sources linked to the behavioural experience of the illusion, we studied inversion and Thatcherisation of faces (comparing across conditions in which no features, the eyes, the mouth, or both features were Thatcherised) on a set of event-related potential (ERP) components. Effects of inversion were found at the N170, P2 and P3b. Effects of eye condition were restricted to the N170 generated in the right hemisphere. Critically, an interaction of orientation and eye Thatcherisation was found for the P3b amplitude. Results from an individual with acquired prosopagnosia who can discriminate Thatcherised from typical faces but cannot categorise them or perceive the illusion (Mestry, Donnelly et al. in Neuropsychologia, 50, 3410-3418, 2012) only differed from typical participants at the P3b component. Findings suggest the P3b links most directly to the experience of the illusion. Overall, the study showed evidence consistent with both perceptual and decisional sources and the need to consider both in relation to configurality.
ERP, thatcher illusion, configural processing, face processing, prosopagnosia
445-452
Mestry, Natalie
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Menneer, Tamaryn
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Wenger, Michael J.
af117fc0-610a-460e-bd72-57978ffcf61b
Benikos, Nicholas
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McCarthy, Rosaleen A.
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Donnelly, Nick
05c83b6b-ee8d-4c9d-85dc-c5dcd6b5427b
Mestry, Natalie
7f725141-430d-4118-a43d-943f6bae787f
Menneer, Tamaryn
d684eaf6-1494-4004-9973-cb8ccc628efa
Wenger, Michael J.
af117fc0-610a-460e-bd72-57978ffcf61b
Benikos, Nicholas
fc863d81-18f4-4ee8-be13-185ad613189d
McCarthy, Rosaleen A.
5377d3de-2597-4427-801b-6b4c61058568
Donnelly, Nick
05c83b6b-ee8d-4c9d-85dc-c5dcd6b5427b

Mestry, Natalie, Menneer, Tamaryn, Wenger, Michael J., Benikos, Nicholas, McCarthy, Rosaleen A. and Donnelly, Nick (2015) The role of configurality in the Thatcher illusion: an ERP study. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 22 (2), 445-452. (doi:10.3758/s13423-014-0705-3). (PMID:25102929)

Record type: Article

Abstract

The Thatcher illusion (Thompson in Perception, 9, 483-484, 1980) is often explained as resulting from recognising a distortion of configural information when 'Thatcherised' faces are upright but not when inverted. However, recent behavioural studies suggest that there is an absence of perceptual configurality in upright Thatcherised faces (Donnelly et al. in Attention, Perception & Psychophysics, 74, 1475-1487, 2012) and both perceptual and decisional sources of configurality in behavioural tasks with Thatcherised stimuli (Mestry, Menneer et al. in Frontiers in Psychology, 3, 456, 2012). To examine sources linked to the behavioural experience of the illusion, we studied inversion and Thatcherisation of faces (comparing across conditions in which no features, the eyes, the mouth, or both features were Thatcherised) on a set of event-related potential (ERP) components. Effects of inversion were found at the N170, P2 and P3b. Effects of eye condition were restricted to the N170 generated in the right hemisphere. Critically, an interaction of orientation and eye Thatcherisation was found for the P3b amplitude. Results from an individual with acquired prosopagnosia who can discriminate Thatcherised from typical faces but cannot categorise them or perceive the illusion (Mestry, Donnelly et al. in Neuropsychologia, 50, 3410-3418, 2012) only differed from typical participants at the P3b component. Findings suggest the P3b links most directly to the experience of the illusion. Overall, the study showed evidence consistent with both perceptual and decisional sources and the need to consider both in relation to configurality.

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Mestry, Menneer, Wenger, Benikos, McCarthy, & Donnelly (2014).pdf - Version of Record
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e-pub ahead of print date: 8 August 2014
Published date: April 2015
Keywords: ERP, thatcher illusion, configural processing, face processing, prosopagnosia
Organisations: Psychology

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Local EPrints ID: 369301
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/369301
PURE UUID: 3b443457-563f-4ca4-b211-6472d7f916aa

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Date deposited: 23 Sep 2014 12:56
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 18:00

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Contributors

Author: Natalie Mestry
Author: Tamaryn Menneer
Author: Michael J. Wenger
Author: Nicholas Benikos
Author: Rosaleen A. McCarthy
Author: Nick Donnelly

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