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Early influence of prior experience on face perception. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Inferring personality from photographs is an automatic behavior that combines sensory input with prior experiences, showing that perception is active rather than passive.
  • Researchers used MEG to study brain responses to faces before and after subjects formed associations between facial features and personality traits over a short period.
  • The study found that prior experiences influenced neural responses to faces very quickly, utilizing two distinct neural pathways that interact later, supporting models of how past knowledge affects perception of new information.

Article Abstract

Inferring someone's personality from his or her photograph is a pervasive and automatic behavior that takes place even if no reliable information about one's character can be derived solely from facial features. This illustrates nicely the idea that perception is not a passive process, but rather an active combination of current sensory inputs with endogenous knowledge derived from prior experience. To understand how and when neural responses to faces can be modulated by prior experience, we recorded magneto-encephalographic (MEG) responses to new faces, before and after subjects were exposed for a short period of 15-20 min to an experimentally induced association between a facial feature (inter-eye distance) and a response (personality judgment). In spite of the absence of any observable response bias following such a short reinforcement phase, our experimental manipulation influenced neural responses to faces as early as 60-85 ms. Source localization of magneto-encephalographic signals, confirmed by intracranial recordings, suggests that prior experience modulates early neural processing along two initially independent neural routes, one initiated in an anterior system that includes the orbitofrontal cortex and the temporal poles, and the second one involving face-sensitive regions in the ventral visual pathway. The two routes are both active as early as 60 ms but engage in reciprocal interactions only later, between 135 and 160 ms. These experimental findings support recent models assuming the existence of a fast anterior pathway activated in parallel with the ventral visual system which would link prior experience with current sensory inputs.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2010.08.081DOI Listing

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