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Description: Here we make the data/information from the project available. Project abstract: Humans are fast and accurate when they recognize familiar faces. Previous neurophysiological studies have shown enhanced representations for the dichotomy of familiar vs. unfamiliar faces. As familiarity is a spectrum, however, any neural correlate should reflect graded representations for more vs. less familiar faces along the spectrum. By systematically varying familiarity across stimuli, we show a neural familiarity spectrum using electroencephalography. We then evaluated the spatiotemporal dynamics of familiar face recognition across the brain. Specifically, we developed a novel informational connectivity method to test whether peri-frontal brain areas contribute to familiar face recognition. Results showed that feed-forward flow dominates for the most familiar faces and top-down flow was only dominant when sensory evidence was insufficient to support face recognition. These results demonstrate that perceptual difficulty and the level of familiarity influence the neural representation of familiar faces and the degree to which peri-frontal neural networks contribute to familiar face recognition.

License: CC-By Attribution 4.0 International

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Familiar-Unfamiliar Face Categorization Task demo

Demo video of the Familiar-Unfamiliar Face Categorization Task: Participants performed a familiar vs. unfamiliar face categorization task by categoriz...

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Bernstein Conference 2020- Video presentation- Poster #70

Project presentation at Bernstein Conference 2020

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EEG data

Below you can see and download the preprocessed (band-pass filtered 0.1–200 Hz and notch-filtered at 50 Hz), epoched (around both stimulus and respons...

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