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Perceptual dominance of oriented faces mirrors the distribution of orientation tunings in inferotemporal neurons

Perceptual dominance of oriented faces mirrors the distribution of orientation tunings in inferotemporal neurons
Perceptual dominance of oriented faces mirrors the distribution of orientation tunings in inferotemporal neurons
In three experiments participants viewed pairs of overlapping transparent faces, with one face upright and the other oriented, and they reported which face was dominant. In each trial, an upright face was presented with a face at 45, 90, 135 or 180°, with transparency set using a linear weighted algorithm, so that relative contrast across faces was biased in favour of oriented faces. Exposure duration was restricted in experiment 1 to 250, 500 or 1000 ms, but was unlimited in experiments 2 and 3. Adults were tested in experiments 1 and 2 and children aged 6–9 years of age were tested in experiment 3. Irrespective of exposure duration, the results showed the probability of dominance being ceded by oriented faces to upright faces was a function of orientation. In comparable conditions, the function found with young children was flatter than with adults. These patterns, and those of earlier perceptual studies, can be explained by the distribution of different orientation tunings found in physiological studies of inferotemporal cortex in macaques.
face perception, overlapping faces, inferotemporal neurons, development, neural basis of behaviour, cognition
0926-6410
771-780
Donnelly, Nick
05c83b6b-ee8d-4c9d-85dc-c5dcd6b5427b
Hadwin, Julie A.
a364caf0-405a-42f3-a04c-4864817393ee
Cave, Kyle
27d7d0fa-5584-4223-9a02-c732b126a18e
Stevenage, Sarah
493f8c57-9af9-4783-b189-e06b8e958460
Donnelly, Nick
05c83b6b-ee8d-4c9d-85dc-c5dcd6b5427b
Hadwin, Julie A.
a364caf0-405a-42f3-a04c-4864817393ee
Cave, Kyle
27d7d0fa-5584-4223-9a02-c732b126a18e
Stevenage, Sarah
493f8c57-9af9-4783-b189-e06b8e958460

Donnelly, Nick, Hadwin, Julie A., Cave, Kyle and Stevenage, Sarah (2003) Perceptual dominance of oriented faces mirrors the distribution of orientation tunings in inferotemporal neurons. Brain Research, 17 (3), 771-780. (doi:10.1016/S0926-6410(03)00201-5).

Record type: Article

Abstract

In three experiments participants viewed pairs of overlapping transparent faces, with one face upright and the other oriented, and they reported which face was dominant. In each trial, an upright face was presented with a face at 45, 90, 135 or 180°, with transparency set using a linear weighted algorithm, so that relative contrast across faces was biased in favour of oriented faces. Exposure duration was restricted in experiment 1 to 250, 500 or 1000 ms, but was unlimited in experiments 2 and 3. Adults were tested in experiments 1 and 2 and children aged 6–9 years of age were tested in experiment 3. Irrespective of exposure duration, the results showed the probability of dominance being ceded by oriented faces to upright faces was a function of orientation. In comparable conditions, the function found with young children was flatter than with adults. These patterns, and those of earlier perceptual studies, can be explained by the distribution of different orientation tunings found in physiological studies of inferotemporal cortex in macaques.

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More information

Published date: 2003
Keywords: face perception, overlapping faces, inferotemporal neurons, development, neural basis of behaviour, cognition

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 40020
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/40020
ISSN: 0926-6410
PURE UUID: 0c22298b-a187-4e46-87da-0d28c8c69154
ORCID for Sarah Stevenage: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4155-2939

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Date deposited: 05 Jul 2006
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 02:46

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Contributors

Author: Nick Donnelly
Author: Julie A. Hadwin
Author: Kyle Cave
Author: Sarah Stevenage ORCID iD

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