Literature DB >> 17959155

Why is the fusiform face area recruited for novel categories of expertise? A neurocomputational investigation.

Matthew H Tong1, Carrie A Joyce, Garrison W Cottrell.   

Abstract

What is the role of the Fusiform Face Area (FFA)? Is it specific to face processing, or is it a visual expertise area? The expertise hypothesis is appealing due to a number of studies showing that the FFA is activated by pictures of objects within the subject's domain of expertise (e.g., cars for car experts, birds for birders, etc.), and that activation of the FFA increases as new expertise is acquired in the lab. However, it is incumbent upon the proponents of the expertise hypothesis to explain how it is that an area that is initially specialized for faces becomes recruited for new classes of stimuli. We dub this the "visual expertise mystery." One suggested answer to this mystery is that the FFA is used simply because it is a fine discrimination area, but this account has historically lacked a mechanism describing exactly how the FFA would be recruited for novel domains of expertise. In this study, we show that a neurocomputational model trained to perform subordinate-level discrimination within a visually homogeneous class develops transformations that magnify differences between similar objects, in marked contrast to networks trained to simply categorize the objects. This magnification generalizes to novel classes, leading to faster learning of new discriminations. We suggest this is why the FFA is recruited for new expertise. The model predicts that individual FFA neurons will have highly variable responses to stimuli within expertise domains.

Mesh:

Year:  2007        PMID: 17959155      PMCID: PMC2443406          DOI: 10.1016/j.brainres.2007.06.079

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain Res        ISSN: 0006-8993            Impact factor:   3.252


  22 in total

1.  Expertise for cars and birds recruits brain areas involved in face recognition.

Authors:  I Gauthier; P Skudlarski; J C Gore; A W Anderson
Journal:  Nat Neurosci       Date:  2000-02       Impact factor: 24.884

Review 2.  Domain specificity in face perception.

Authors:  N Kanwisher
Journal:  Nat Neurosci       Date:  2000-08       Impact factor: 24.884

3.  Organization of face and object recognition in modular neural network models.

Authors:  M N. Dailey; G W. Cottrell
Journal:  Neural Netw       Date:  1999-10

Review 4.  Visual object understanding.

Authors:  Thomas J Palmeri; Isabel Gauthier
Journal:  Nat Rev Neurosci       Date:  2004-04       Impact factor: 34.870

5.  Becoming a "Greeble" expert: exploring mechanisms for face recognition.

Authors:  I Gauthier; M J Tarr
Journal:  Vision Res       Date:  1997-06       Impact factor: 1.886

6.  Levels of categorization in visual recognition studied using functional magnetic resonance imaging.

Authors:  I Gauthier; A W Anderson; M J Tarr; P Skudlarski; J C Gore
Journal:  Curr Biol       Date:  1997-09-01       Impact factor: 10.834

7.  Uncertainty relation for resolution in space, spatial frequency, and orientation optimized by two-dimensional visual cortical filters.

Authors:  J G Daugman
Journal:  J Opt Soc Am A       Date:  1985-07       Impact factor: 2.129

8.  Distributed and overlapping representations of faces and objects in ventral temporal cortex.

Authors:  J V Haxby; M I Gobbini; M L Furey; A Ishai; J L Schouten; P Pietrini
Journal:  Science       Date:  2001-09-28       Impact factor: 47.728

9.  What Is Special about Face Recognition? Nineteen Experiments on a Person with Visual Object Agnosia and Dyslexia but Normal Face Recognition.

Authors:  M Moscovitch; G Winocur; M Behrmann
Journal:  J Cogn Neurosci       Date:  1997       Impact factor: 3.225

10.  Is the fusiform face area specialized for faces, individuation, or expert individuation?

Authors:  Gillian Rhodes; Graham Byatt; Patricia T Michie; Aina Puce
Journal:  J Cogn Neurosci       Date:  2004-03       Impact factor: 3.225

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  4 in total

1.  The roles of visual expertise and visual input in the face inversion effect: behavioral and neurocomputational evidence.

Authors:  Joseph P McCleery; Lingyun Zhang; Liezhong Ge; Zhe Wang; Eric M Christiansen; Kang Lee; Garrison W Cottrell
Journal:  Vision Res       Date:  2008-01-28       Impact factor: 1.886

2.  Knowing when not to swing: EEG evidence that enhanced perception-action coupling underlies baseball batter expertise.

Authors:  Jordan Muraskin; Jason Sherwin; Paul Sajda
Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2015-08-20       Impact factor: 6.556

3.  The role of line junctions in object recognition: The case of reading musical notation.

Authors:  Yetta Kwailing Wong; Alan C-N Wong
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2018-08

4.  A connectivity-constrained computational account of topographic organization in primate high-level visual cortex.

Authors:  Nicholas M Blauch; Marlene Behrmann; David C Plaut
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2022-01-18       Impact factor: 12.779

  4 in total

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