| Literature DB >> 28051770 |
J Swaroop Guntupalli1,2, Kelsey G Wheeler1,2, M Ida Gobbini1,2,3.
Abstract
Neural models of a distributed system for face perception implicate a network of regions in the ventral visual stream for recognition of identity. Here, we report a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) neural decoding study in humans that shows that this pathway culminates in the right inferior frontal cortex face area (rIFFA) with a representation of individual identities that has been disentangled from variable visual features in different images of the same person. At earlier stages in the pathway, processing begins in early visual cortex and the occipital face area with representations of head view that are invariant across identities, and proceeds to an intermediate level of representation in the fusiform face area in which identity is emerging but still entangled with head view. Three-dimensional, view-invariant representation of identities in the rIFFA may be the critical link to the extended system for face perception, affording activation of person knowledge and emotional responses to familiar faces.Entities:
Keywords: fusiform face area; inferior frontal face area; neural decoding; occipital face area; view-invariant face identity
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28051770 PMCID: PMC5939212 DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhw344
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cereb Cortex ISSN: 1047-3211 Impact factor: 5.357
Figure 1.Schematic of the main experiment with an example of the trial structure. fMRI study had 10 runs of the main experiment and 4 runs of localizer interspersed. Each run of the main experiment had 63 trials—60 stimulus trials and 3 fixation trials. Each trial started with one of the 20 face images presented 3 times at variable size and location with 50 ms of ISI between presentations, and ended with a 3400 ms fixation. Subjects performed a 1-back identity matching task to keep their attention to the stimuli.
Figure 2.Surface searchlight classification of faces. (A) Classification accuracies for face identity cross-validated over views (top) and head view cross-validated over identities (bottom). Chance accuracy is 25% for face identity and 20% for head view classifications. Maps are thresholded at P < 0.05 after correcting for multiple comparisons using permutation testing. (B) MDS plots of representational geometries of responses to face stimuli in the identity cluster (top) and the head view cluster (bottom). Faces of the same identity are colored the same, and faces with same head view have the same background or outline. Coloring based on the identity is emphasized on the top and coloring based on the head view emphasized on the bottom.
Figure 3.Surface searchlight based modeling of representational geometry. Neural representation of faces in each searchlight was modeled with 3 model similarity structures as regressors using ridge regression. Representational geometry in the rIFFA correlated with the identity model (top), whereas representational geometry in EVC correlated with the head view model (bottom). Maps are thresholded at P < 0.05 after correcting for multiple comparisons using permutation testing. Correlation with the mirror symmetry model did not reveal any significant clusters.
Figure 4.Classification and representational similarity analyses in face-selective ROIs. (A) Anatomical locations of face-selective ROIs as determined by localizer. (B) Classification accuracies of face identity invariant to view and head view invariant to identity in regions of the core face system. (C) Modeling representational geometry in ROIs. Asterisks indicate accuracies that were significant with permutation. Error bars indicate standard error (SEM).