1. Dissociation of face-selective cortical responses by attention.
- Author
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Furey, Maura L., Tanskanen, Topi, Beauchamp, Michael S., Avikainen, Sari, Uutela, Kimmo, Hari, Riitta, and Haxby, James V.
- Subjects
MEDICAL imaging systems ,MAGNETOENCEPHALOGRAPHY ,BRAIN magnetic fields measurement ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) ,ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
We studied attentional modulation of cortical processing of faces and houses with functional MRI and magnetoencephalography (MEG). MEG detected an early, transient face-selective response. Directing attention to houses in "double-exposure" pictures of superimposed faces and houses strongly suppressed the characteristic, face-selective functional MRI response in the fusiform gyrus. By contrast, attention had no effect on the M170, the early, face-selective response detected with MEG. Late (>190 ms) category-related MEG responses elicited by faces and houses, however. were strongly modulated by attention. These results indicate that hemodynamic and electrophysiological measures of face-selective cortical processing complement each other. The hemodynamic signals reflect primarily late responses that can be modulated by feedback connections. By contrast, the early, face-specific M170 that was not modulated by attention likely reflects a rapid, feed-forward phase of face-selective processing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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