Literature DB >> 15509388

The faces of development: a review of early face processing over childhood.

M J Taylor1, M Batty, R J Itier.   

Abstract

The understanding of the adult proficiency in recognizing and extracting information from faces is still limited despite the number of studies over the last decade. Our knowledge on the development of these capacities is even more restricted, as only a handful of such studies exist. Here we present a combined reanalysis of four ERP studies in children from 4 to 15 years of age and adults (n = 424, across the studies), which investigated face processing in implicit and explicit tasks. We restricted these analyses to what was common across studies: early ERP components and upright face processing across all four studies and the inversion effect, investigated in three of the studies. These data demonstrated that processing faces implicates very rapid neural activity, even in young children--at the P1 component--with protracted age-related change in both P1 and N170, that were sensitive to the different task demands. Inversion produced latency and amplitude effects on the P1 from the youngest group, but on N170 only starting in mid childhood. These developmental data suggest that there are functionally different sources of the P1 and N170, related to the processing of different aspects of faces.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15509388     DOI: 10.1162/0898929042304732

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Cogn Neurosci        ISSN: 0898-929X            Impact factor:   3.225


  82 in total

1.  Emotional face processing and attention performance in three domains: neurophysiological mechanisms and moderating effects of trait anxiety.

Authors:  Tracy A Dennis; Chao-Cheng Chen
Journal:  Int J Psychophysiol       Date:  2007-02-23       Impact factor: 2.997

2.  Face processing in Pervasive Developmental Disorder (PDD): the roles of expertise and spatial frequency.

Authors:  M A Boeschoten; J L Kenemans; H van Engeland; C Kemner
Journal:  J Neural Transm (Vienna)       Date:  2007-07-18       Impact factor: 3.575

3.  Neurophysiological markers that predict and track treatment outcomes in childhood anxiety.

Authors:  Kathryn M Hum; Katharina Manassis; Marc D Lewis
Journal:  J Abnorm Child Psychol       Date:  2013-11

Review 4.  The use of near-infrared spectroscopy in the study of typical and atypical development.

Authors:  Ross E Vanderwert; Charles A Nelson
Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2013-10-12       Impact factor: 6.556

5.  Emotional face processing and emotion regulation in children: an ERP study.

Authors:  Tracy A Dennis; Melville M Malone; Chao-Cheng Chen
Journal:  Dev Neuropsychol       Date:  2009       Impact factor: 2.253

6.  Identification of emotional facial expressions among behaviorally inhibited adolescents with lifetime anxiety disorders.

Authors:  Bethany C Reeb-Sutherland; Lela Rankin Williams; Kathryn A Degnan; Koraly Pérez-Edgar; Andrea Chronis-Tuscano; Ellen Leibenluft; Daniel S Pine; Seth D Pollak; Nathan A Fox
Journal:  Cogn Emot       Date:  2014-05-06

Review 7.  Use of event-related potentials in the study of typical and atypical development.

Authors:  Charles A Nelson; Joseph P McCleery
Journal:  J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry       Date:  2008-11       Impact factor: 8.829

8.  Early Visually Evoked Electrophysiological Responses Over the Human Brain (P1, N170) Show Stable Patterns of Face-Sensitivity from 4 years to Adulthood.

Authors:  Dana Kuefner; Adélaïde de Heering; Corentin Jacques; Ernesto Palmero-Soler; Bruno Rossion
Journal:  Front Hum Neurosci       Date:  2010-01-06       Impact factor: 3.169

9.  Developmental continuity and change in responses to social and nonsocial categories in human extrastriate visual cortex.

Authors:  Kevin A Pelphrey; Juliana Lopez; James P Morris
Journal:  Front Hum Neurosci       Date:  2009-09-30       Impact factor: 3.169

10.  Auditory and visual novelty processing in normally-developing Kenyan children.

Authors:  Michael Kihara; Alexandra M Hogan; Charles R Newton; Harrun H Garrashi; Brian R Neville; Michelle de Haan
Journal:  Clin Neurophysiol       Date:  2010-01-18       Impact factor: 3.708

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