Breaking through suppression: Face expertise selectively modulates very early awareness of high level face properties.

IF 2 3区 心理学 Q3 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES
Michael Papasavva, Louise Ewing, Inês Mares, Marie L Smith
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Neurotypical variability in face recognition abilities is known to be driven by differences present across multiple elements of an extended processing pathway, i.e., from early visual perception through to later explicit retrieval and recall. Here across two experiments, we utilised breaking Continuous Flash Suppression paradigms to explore the earliest stage of face encoding: the lead up to conscious detection. We investigated whether faces selectively receive preferential access to awareness among participants with relatively stronger (cf. weaker) face recognition abilities at the categorical level (contrasting detection of faces with another object category) and higher levels of face processing (exploring differences associated with orientation and attractiveness). Both experiments identified selectively faster access to awareness for faces over a non-face object control (houses) in better face recognisers at both the group and individual level. Experiment two further clarified that these expertise-related effects are selective to upright (cf. inverted) faces, indicating that this link is unlikely to be solely driven by sensitivity to low level visual cues. We also observed expertise-related modulation of attractiveness effects on CFS breakthrough, consistent with the possibility that individuals with higher levels of face processing ability have accelerated early access to even this high-level stimulus dimension. Taken together these experiments provide new insight into very early face perception, and the extent to which expertise modulates this processing stage at both the group and individual level.

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来源期刊
Neuropsychologia
Neuropsychologia 医学-行为科学
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
3.80%
发文量
228
审稿时长
4 months
期刊介绍: Neuropsychologia is an international interdisciplinary journal devoted to experimental and theoretical contributions that advance understanding of human cognition and behavior from a neuroscience perspective. The journal will consider for publication studies that link brain function with cognitive processes, including attention and awareness, action and motor control, executive functions and cognitive control, memory, language, and emotion and social cognition.
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