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Inactivation of face selective neurons alters eye movements when free viewing faces.

Reza AzadiEmily LopezJessica TaubertAmanda PattersonArash Afraz
Published in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2023)
It has been shown, for more than half a century, that eye movements follow distinctive patterns when free viewing faces. This suggests causal involvement of the face-encoding visual neurons in the eye movements. However, the literature is scant of evidence for this possibility and has focused mostly on the link between low-level image saliency and eye movements. Here, for the first time, we bring causal evidence showing how face-selective neurons in inferior temporal cortex inform and steer eye movements when free viewing faces.
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