2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.cortex.2016.04.005
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Reduced sensitivity to contrast signals from the eye region in developmental prosopagnosia

Abstract: Contrast-related signals from the eye region are known to be important for the processing of facial identity. Individuals with developmental prosopagnosia (DP) have severe face recognition problems, which may be linked to deficits in the perceptual processing of identity-related information from the eyes. We tested this hypothesis by measuring N170 components in DP participants and age-matched controls in response to face images where the contrast polarity of the eyes and of other face parts was independently … Show more

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Cited by 27 publications
(26 citation statements)
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References 68 publications
(96 reference statements)
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“…Based on this distribution, the reliability of an empirically observed ERP difference between conditions was determined for individual participants. If the probability of obtaining the observed difference by chance is below 5%, it is accepted as statistically significant (see Dalrymple et al, 2011;Oruc et al, 2011;Fisher et al, 2016Fisher et al, , 2017, for previous applications of this procedure in ERP studies of prosopagnosia). In the present experiment, this bootstrap procedure was based on EEG mean amplitudes obtained between 230 and 280 ms after S2 onset on full repetition and full change trials (collapsed the eight lateral posterior electrodes over the left and right hemisphere).…”
Section: Eeg Recording and Data Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Based on this distribution, the reliability of an empirically observed ERP difference between conditions was determined for individual participants. If the probability of obtaining the observed difference by chance is below 5%, it is accepted as statistically significant (see Dalrymple et al, 2011;Oruc et al, 2011;Fisher et al, 2016Fisher et al, , 2017, for previous applications of this procedure in ERP studies of prosopagnosia). In the present experiment, this bootstrap procedure was based on EEG mean amplitudes obtained between 230 and 280 ms after S2 onset on full repetition and full change trials (collapsed the eight lateral posterior electrodes over the left and right hemisphere).…”
Section: Eeg Recording and Data Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…N250r components have been consistently observed over bilateral posterior occipito-temporal electrode locations, are accompanied by a fronto-central positivity, and are assumed to reflect a match between a face representation in working memory and an on-line perceptual representations of a particular face (e.g. Schweinberger, 2011;Schweinberger et al, 2004;Zimmermann & Eimer, 2013;Towler, Kelly, & Eimer, 2016;Fisher, Towler, & Eimer, 2016). Although the N250r is usually largest in response to repetitions of two physically identical face images (e.g., Schweinberger et al, 2002), this component is also reliably present for repetitions of different images of the same face (Bindemann et al, 2008;Zimmermann & Eimer, 2013, demonstrating that the underlying face identity matching processes are at least partially image-independent.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Based on this distribution, the reliability of an empirically observed ERP difference between conditions was determined for individual participants. If the probability of obtaining the observed difference by chance is below 5%, it can be accepted as statistically significant (see Dalrymple et al, 2011;Eimer, et al 2012;Oruc et al, 2011;Fisher et al, 2016b, for previous applications of this procedure in ERP studies of prosopagnosia). In the present experiment, this bootstrap procedure was based on EEG mean amplitudes obtained between 220 and 320 ms after S2 onset on identity repetition and identity change trials where facial expression was repeated (collapsed the eight lateral posterior electrodes over the left and right hemisphere).…”
Section: Eeg Recording and Analysesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Most individuals with DP show normal N170 components to faces versus non-face objects (Towler, Gosling, Duchaine, & Eimer, 2012), suggesting that the ability to perceptually discriminate between faces and non-faces is largely intact. However, changes to the prototypical spatial configuration and contrast properties of face images (such as presenting face images upside-down, spatially scrambling internal facial features, or contrast-inverting the eye region) produce atypical N170 amplitude modulations in individuals with DP Towler, Parketny, & Eimer, 2016;Fisher, Towler, & Eimer, 2016b). This suggests that perceptual face processing mechanisms in DP may be less well tuned to the spatial configuration and contrast properties that are the defining features of a typical upright face, and are therefore less sensitive to deviations from a prototypical visual face template.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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