Rossion B, Schiltz C, Robaye L, Pirenne D, Crommelinck M
Department of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912, USA.
J Cogn Neurosci. 2001 Oct 1;13(7):1019-34. doi: 10.1162/089892901753165917.
Where and how does the brain discriminate familiar and unfamiliar faces? This question has not been answered yet by neuroimaging studies partly because different tasks were performed on familiar and unfamiliar faces, or because familiar faces were associated with semantic and lexical information. Here eight subjects were trained during 3 days with a set of 30 faces. The familiarized faces were morphed with unfamiliar faces. Presented with continua of unfamiliar and familiar faces in a pilot experiment, a group of eight subjects presented a categorical perception of face familiarity: there was a sharp boundary in percentage of familiarity decisions between 40% and 60% faces. In the main experiment, subjects were scanned (PET) on the fourth day (after 3 days of training) in six conditions, all requiring a sex classification task. Completely novel faces (0%) were presented in Condition 1 and familiar faces (100%) in Condition 6, while faces of steps of 20% in the continuum of familiarity were presented in Conditions 2 to 5 (20% to 80%). A principal component analysis (PCA) indicated that most variations in neural responses were related to the dissociation between faces perceived as familiar (60% to 100%) and faces perceived as unfamiliar (0 to 40%). Subtraction analyses did not disclose any increase of activation for faces perceived as familiar while there were large relative increases for faces perceived as unfamiliar in several regions of the right occipito-temporal visual pathway. These changes were all categorical and were observed mainly in the right middle occipital gyrus, the right posterior fusiform gyrus, and the right inferotemporal cortex. These results show that (1) the discrimination between familiar and unfamiliar faces is related to relative increases in the right ventral pathway to unfamiliar/novel faces; (2) familiar and unfamiliar faces are discriminated in an all-or-none fashion rather than proportionally to their resemblance to stored representations; and (3) categorical perception of faces is associated with abrupt changes of brain activity in the regions that discriminate the two extremes of the multidimensional continuum.
大脑在何处以及如何区分熟悉和不熟悉的面孔?神经影像学研究尚未回答这个问题,部分原因是在熟悉和不熟悉的面孔上执行了不同的任务,或者因为熟悉的面孔与语义和词汇信息相关联。在这里,八名受试者在三天内对一组30张面孔进行了训练。将熟悉的面孔与不熟悉的面孔进行了变形处理。在一项初步实验中,向一组八名受试者呈现不熟悉和熟悉面孔的连续体时,他们对面孔熟悉度呈现出类别感知:在40%至60%的面孔之间,熟悉度判断的百分比存在明显界限。在主要实验中,在第四天(经过三天训练后)对受试者进行扫描(PET),共六种条件,所有条件都需要进行性别分类任务。条件1中呈现完全新颖的面孔(0%),条件6中呈现熟悉的面孔(100%),而在条件2至5中呈现熟悉度连续体中20%步长的面孔(20%至80%)。主成分分析(PCA)表明,神经反应的大多数变化与被视为熟悉的面孔(60%至100%)和被视为不熟悉的面孔(0至40%)之间的分离有关。减法分析未发现被视为熟悉的面孔的激活增加,而在右侧枕颞视觉通路的几个区域中,被视为不熟悉的面孔的激活有较大的相对增加。这些变化都是类别性的,主要在右侧枕中回、右侧梭状回后部和右侧颞下皮质中观察到。这些结果表明:(1)熟悉和不熟悉面孔之间的区分与右侧腹侧通路中对不熟悉/新颖面孔的相对增加有关;(2)熟悉和不熟悉的面孔是以全或无的方式区分的,而不是与其与存储表征的相似程度成比例;(3)对面孔的类别感知与区分多维连续体两端的区域中大脑活动的突然变化相关。