Literature DB >> 16035037

Neural substrates for functionally discriminating self-face from personally familiar faces.

Steven M Platek1, James W Loughead, Ruben C Gur, Samantha Busch, Kosha Ruparel, Nicholas Phend, Ivan S Panyavin, Daniel D Langleben.   

Abstract

Understanding the neurobiological substrates of self-recognition yields important insight into socially and clinically critical cognitive functions such as theory of mind. Experimental evidence suggests that right frontal and parietal lobes preferentially process self-referent information. Recognition of one's own face is an important parameter of self-recognition, but well-controlled experimental data on the brain substrates of self-face recognition is limited. The goal of this study was to characterize the activation specific to self-face in comparison with control conditions of two levels of familiarity: unknown unfamiliar face and the more stringent control of a personally familiar face. We studied 12 healthy volunteers who made "unknown," "familiar," and "self" judgments about photographs of three types of faces: six different novel faces, a personally familiar face (participant's fraternity brother), and their own face during an event-related functional MRI (fMRI) experiment. Contrasting unknown faces with baseline showed activation of the inferior occipital lobe, which supports previous findings suggesting the presence of a generalized face-processing area within the inferior occipital-temporal region. Activation in response to a familiar face, when contrasted with an unknown face, invoked insula, middle temporal, inferior parietal, and medial frontal lobe activation, which is consistent with an existing hypothesis suggesting familiar face recognition taps neural substrates that are different from those involved in general facial processing. Brain response to self-face, when contrasted with familiar face, revealed activation in the right superior frontal gyrus, medial frontal and inferior parietal lobes, and left middle temporal gyrus. The contrast familiar vs. self produced activation only in the anterior cingulate gyrus. Our results support the existence of a bilateral network for both perceptual and executive aspects of self-face processing that cannot be accounted for by a simple hemispheric dominance model. This network is similar to those implicated in social cognition, mirror neuron matching, and face-name matching. Our findings also show that some regions of the medial frontal and parietal lobes are specifically activated by familiar faces but not unknown or self-faces, indicating that these regions may serve as markers of face familiarity and that the differences between activation associated with self-face recognition and familiar face recognition are subtle and appear to be localized to lateral frontal, parietal, and temporal regions. Copyright (c) 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16035037      PMCID: PMC6871291          DOI: 10.1002/hbm.20168

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hum Brain Mapp        ISSN: 1065-9471            Impact factor:   5.038


  35 in total

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2.  Towards a functional neuroanatomy of self processing: effects of faces and words.

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3.  Parietal cortex and representation of the mental Self.

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Review 9.  The mirror-neuron system.

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  75 in total

1.  Differential neural activity and connectivity for processing one's own face: a preliminary report.

Authors:  Rajamannar Ramasubbu; Svetlana Masalovich; Ismael Gaxiola; Scott Peltier; Paul E Holtzheimer; Christine Heim; Bradley Goodyear; Glenda Macqueen; Helen S Mayberg
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2.  An rTMS study into self-face recognition using video-morphing technique.

Authors:  Christine Heinisch; Hubert R Dinse; Martin Tegenthoff; Georg Juckel; Martin Brüne
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Review 3.  Brain connectivity and the self: the case of cerebral disconnection.

Authors:  Lucina Q Uddin
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4.  Mental imagery of self-location during spontaneous and active self-other interactions: an electrical neuroimaging study.

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5.  rTMS to the right inferior parietal lobule disrupts self-other discrimination.

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Journal:  Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci       Date:  2006-06       Impact factor: 3.436

6.  Reduction in white matter connectivity, revealed by diffusion tensor imaging, may account for age-related changes in face perception.

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7.  The self across the senses: an fMRI study of self-face and self-voice recognition.

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8.  Face processing in depersonalization: an fMRI study of the unfamiliar self.

Authors:  Sarah Ketay; Holly K Hamilton; Brian W Haas; Daphne Simeon
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9.  Faces distort eye movement trajectories, but the distortion is not stronger for your own face.

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10.  Cortical responses to self and others.

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Journal:  Hum Brain Mapp       Date:  2009-03       Impact factor: 5.038

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