| Literature DB >> 23874881 |
Hannes O Tiedt1, Joachim E Weber, Alfred Pauls, Klaus M Beier, Andreas Lueschow.
Abstract
The processing of faces relies on a specialized neural system comprising bilateral cortical structures with a dominance of the right hemisphere. However, due to inconsistencies of earlier findings as well as more recent results such functional lateralization has become a topic of discussion. In particular, studies employing behavioural tasks and electrophysiological methods indicate a dominance of the right hemisphere during face perception only in men whereas women exhibit symmetric and bilateral face processing. The aim of this study was to further investigate such sex differences in hemispheric processing of personally familiar and opposite-sex faces using whole-head magnetoencephalography (MEG). We found a right-lateralized M170-component in occipito-temporal sensor clusters in men as opposed to a bilateral response in women. Furthermore, the same pattern was obtained in performing dipole localization and determining dipole strength in the M170-timewindow. These results suggest asymmetric involvement of face-responsive neural structures in men and allow to ascribe this asymmetry to the fusiform gyrus. This specifies findings from previous investigations employing event-related potentials (ERP) and LORETA reconstruction methods yielding rather extended bilateral activations showing left asymmetry in women and right lateralization in men. We discuss our finding of an asymmetric fusiform activation pattern in men in terms of holistic face processing during face evaluation and sex differences with regard to visual strategies in general and interest for opposite faces in special. Taken together the pattern of hemispheric specialization observed here yields new insights into sex differences in face perception and entails further questions about interactions between biological sex, psychological gender and influences that might be stimulus-driven or task dependent.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23874881 PMCID: PMC3706449 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0069107
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Sex-difference in hemispheric organization during face processing: Magnetic activity in sensor-clusters over left and right hemisphere averaged across 13 female (red) and 13 male (blue) subjects.
M170 amplitude is larger in the right hemisphere in men without laterality effects in female participants. Note that M170-amplitudes were inverted to make comparisons possible.
Figure 2Field topography corresponding to the M170 peak-amplitude in each hemisphere and for men and women separately (time point of maximum is indicated as inset).
Lateralization of M170 amplitude and dipole strength.
| All | Men | Women | |
| Left/Right | Left/Right | Left/Right | |
| M170 Amplitude [fT] | −145.2/−176.3 | −141.3/−209.8 | −149.1/−142.7 |
| t = –2.310 | t = –3.775 | t = 0.463 | |
| p = 0.029* | p = 0.003** | p = 0.65 | |
| Dipole strength [nAm] | 33.1/46.1 | 22.6/50.0 | 45.6/41.4 |
| “free” condition | t = 2.335 | t = 5.624 | t = –0.516 |
| p = 0.029* | p = 0.0001** | p = 0.61 | |
| Dipole strength [nAm] | 26.1/34.1 | 17.3/35.5 | 34.9/35.6 |
| “fixed” condition | t = 2.307 | t = 3.391 | t = 0.165 |
| p = 0.03* | p = 0.005* | p = 0.87 |
Post-Hoc comparisons of significant main effects or interactions indicated by ANOVAs for M170 amplitude and dipole strength obtained within the M170-timewindow. Note that analysis of dipole strength in the “free” condition is based on 11 female subjects because no plausible solution could be obtained in 2 participants; all other analyses include 13 subjects of each gender. Comparisons between hemispheres were based on paired-sample t-tests. p-values<0.05 are indicated by *, p-values <0.01 by **.