Perception and Processing of Faces in the Human Brain Is Tuned to Typical Feature Locations.
Benjamin de HaasD Samuel SchwarzkopfIvan AlvarezRebecca P LawsonLinda HenrikssonNikolaus KriegeskorteGeraint ReesPublished in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2017)
Faces attract our attention and trigger stereotypical patterns of visual fixations, concentrating on inner features, like eyes and mouth. Here we show that the visual system represents face features better when they are shown at retinal positions where they typically fall during natural vision. When facial features were shown at typical (rather than reversed) visual field locations, they were discriminated better by humans and could be decoded with higher accuracy from brain activity patterns in the right occipital face area. This suggests that brain representations of face features do not cover the visual field uniformly. It may help us understand the well-known face-inversion effect and conditions affecting gaze behavior toward faces, such as prosopagnosia and autism spectrum disorders.