Frontiers in Human Neuroscience (Feb 2010)

Personal familiarity influences the processing of upright and inverted faces in infants

  • Benjamin J Balas,
  • Benjamin J Balas,
  • Charles A Nelson,
  • Charles A Nelson,
  • Alissa Westerlund,
  • Vanessa Vogel-Farley,
  • Tracy Riggins,
  • Dana Kuefner

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/neuro.09.001.2010
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4

Abstract

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Infant face processing becomes more selective during the first year of life as a function of varying experience with distinct face categories defined by species, race, and age. Given that any individual face belongs to many such categories (e.g. A young Caucasian man’s face) we asked how the neural selectivity for one aspect of facial appearance was affected by category membership along another dimension of variability. 6-month-old infants were shown upright and inverted pictures of either their own mother or a stranger while event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded. We found that the amplitude of the P400 (a face-sensitive ERP component) was only sensitive to the orientation of the mother’s face, suggesting that “tuning” of the neural response to faces is realized jointly across multiple dimensions of face appearance. .

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