4.8 Article

Two areas for familiar face recognition in the primate brain

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 357, Issue 6351, Pages 591-595

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.aan1139

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology (MEXT), Japan
  2. Howard Hughes Medical Institute International Student Research Fellowship
  3. Center for Brains, Minds, and Machines - National Science Foundation STC award [CCF-1231216]
  4. National Eye Institute of the National Institutes of Health [R01 EY021594]
  5. National Institute of Mental Health of the National Institutes of Health [R01 MH105397]
  6. Human Frontier Science Program [RGP0015/2013]
  7. McKnight Foundation
  8. Pew Charitable Trust
  9. The New York Stem Cell Foundation

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Familiarity alters face recognition: Familiar faces are recognized more accurately than unfamiliar ones and under difficult viewing conditions when unfamiliar face recognition fails. The neural basis for this fundamental difference remains unknown. Using whole-brain functional magnetic resonance imaging, we found that personally familiar faces engage the macaque face-processing network more than unfamiliar faces. Familiar faces also recruited two hitherto unknown face areas at anatomically conserved locations within the perirhinal cortex and the temporal pole. These two areas, but not the core face-processing network, responded to familiar faces emerging from a blur with a characteristic nonlinear surge, akin to the abruptness of familiar face recognition. In contrast, responses to unfamiliar faces and objects remained linear. Thus, two temporal lobe areas extend the core face-processing network into a familiar face-recognition system.

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