| Literature DB >> 18558862 |
Doris Y Tsao1, Margaret S Livingstone.
Abstract
Faces are among the most informative stimuli we ever perceive: Even a split-second glimpse of a person's face tells us his identity, sex, mood, age, race, and direction of attention. The specialness of face processing is acknowledged in the artificial vision community, where contests for face-recognition algorithms abound. Neurological evidence strongly implicates a dedicated machinery for face processing in the human brain to explain the double dissociability of face- and object-recognition deficits. Furthermore, recent evidence shows that macaques too have specialized neural machinery for processing faces. Here we propose a unifying hypothesis, deduced from computational, neurological, fMRI, and single-unit experiments: that what makes face processing special is that it is gated by an obligatory detection process. We clarify this idea in concrete algorithmic terms and show how it can explain a variety of phenomena associated with face processing.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18558862 PMCID: PMC2629401 DOI: 10.1146/annurev.neuro.30.051606.094238
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Annu Rev Neurosci ISSN: 0147-006X Impact factor: 12.449