Distinct patterns of neural response to faces from different races in humans and deep networks.

Ao Wang, Magdalena W Sliwinska, David M Watson, Sam Smith, Timothy J Andrews
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Social categories such as the race or ethnicity of an individual are typically conveyed by the visual appearance of the face. The aim of this study was to explore how these differences in facial appearance are represented in human and artificial neural networks. First, we compared the similarity of faces from different races using a neural network trained to discriminate identity. We found that the differences between races were most evident in the fully connected layers of the network. Although these layers were also able to predict behavioural judgements of face identity from human participants, performance was biased toward White faces. Next, we measured the neural response in face-selective regions of the human brain to faces from different races in Asian and White participants. We found distinct patterns of response to faces from different races in face-selective regions. We also found that the spatial pattern of response was more consistent across participants for own-race compared to other-race faces. Together, these findings show that faces from different races elicit different patterns of response in human and artificial neural networks. These differences may underlie the ability to make categorical judgements and explain the behavioural advantage for the recognition of own-race faces.

人类对不同种族面孔的不同神经反应模式和深度网络。
个人的种族或民族等社会类别通常通过面部的视觉外观来传达。这项研究的目的是探索这些面部表情的差异是如何在人类和人工神经网络中表现出来的。首先,我们使用经过训练的识别身份的神经网络来比较不同种族人脸的相似性。我们发现种族之间的差异在网络的完全连接层中最为明显。尽管这些层也能够预测人类参与者对人脸身份的行为判断,但表现偏向于白人面孔。接下来,我们测量了亚洲人和白人参与者大脑面部选择区域对不同种族人脸的神经反应。我们在人脸选择区域发现了对不同种族人脸的不同反应模式。我们还发现,与其他种族面孔相比,本种族参与者的反应空间模式更加一致。总之,这些发现表明,来自不同种族的面孔在人类和人工神经网络中引发不同的反应模式。这些差异可能是做出明确判断的能力的基础,并解释识别自己种族面孔的行为优势。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
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