4.3 Article

Aftereffects support opponent coding of face gender

期刊

JOURNAL OF VISION
卷 13, 期 14, 页码 -

出版社

ASSOC RESEARCH VISION OPHTHALMOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1167/13.14.16

关键词

face perception; face gender aftereffects; norm-based opponent coding; multichannel coding; caricaturing

资金

  1. Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence in Cognition and its Disorders [CE110001021]
  2. ARC [DP0877379]
  3. ARC Discovery Outstanding Researcher Award [DP130102300]
  4. ARC Queen Elizabeth II Fellowship [DP0984558]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Many aspects of faces derived from structural information appear to be neurally represented using norm-based opponent coding. Recently, however, Zhao, Series, Hancock, and Bednar (2011) have argued that another aspect with a strong structural component, namely face gender, is instead multichannel coded. Their conclusion was based on finding that face gender aftereffects initially increased but then decreased for adaptors with increasing levels of gender caricaturing. Critically, this interpretation rests on the untested assumption that caricaturing the differences between male and female composite faces increases perceived sexual dimorphism (masculinity/femininity) of faces. We tested this assumption in Study 1 and found that it held for male, but not female faces. A multichannel account cannot, therefore, be ruled out, although a decrease in realism of adaptors was observed that could have contributed to the decrease in aftereffects. However, their aftereffects likely reflect low-level retinotopic adaptation, which was not minimized for most of their participants. In Study 2 we minimized low-level adaptation and found that face gender aftereffects were strongly positively related to the perceived sexual dimorphism of adaptors. We found no decrease for extreme adaptors, despite testing adaptors with higher perceived sexual dimorphism levels than those used by Zhao et al. These results are consistent with opponent coding of higher-level dimensions related to the perception of face gender.

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