The Occipital Face Area Is Causally Involved in Facial Viewpoint Perception.
Tim C KietzmannSonia PoltoratskiPeter KönigRandolph BlakeFrank TongSam LingPublished in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2016)
Faces are among the most salient objects we encounter during our everyday activities. Moreover, we are remarkably adept at identifying people at a glance, despite the diversity of viewpoints during our social encounters. Here, we investigate the cortical mechanisms underlying this ability by focusing on effects of viewpoint symmetry, i.e., the invariance of neural responses to mirror-symmetric facial viewpoints. We did this by temporarily disrupting neural processing in the occipital face area (OFA) using transcranial magnetic stimulation. Our results demonstrate that the OFA causally contributes to judgments facial viewpoints and suggest that effects of viewpoint symmetry, previously observed using fMRI, arise from an interhemispheric integration of visual information even when only one hemisphere receives direct visual stimulation.