Learning to See Friendly Faces in Different Places
Meaningful social interactions train visual cortex neurons to recognize a familiar face in different visual locations, suggests new research published in eNeuro. The study demonstrates how the brain learns to perceive other people as individuals.
Previous research has shown that attributes of the same face can appear to be different depending on where it is presented in the visual field. For example, a face with unisex features can be seen as a male face in one place and as a female face in another. This finding led Ida Gobbini, Matteo Visconti di Oleggio Castello, and colleagues to investigate how regular interactions with the people in one's life influence perception of such familiar faces.
The researchers asked graduate students to identify photographs of their peers presented on a screen in various locations around a fixation point. They found participants who reported stronger familiarity with one another more consistently recognized the other individual in different parts of their visual field. The team further simulated how repeated social interactions may tune independent populations of neurons to recognize an individual face regardless of where it appears in space.
Article: Idiosyncratic, retinotopic bias in face identification modulated by familiarity
Corresponding authors: M. Ida Gobbini (University of Bologna, Italy and Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH, USA), mariaida.gobbini@unibo.it and Matteo Visconti di Oleggio Castello (Dartmouth College), mvdoc.gr@dartmouth.edu