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Single-Unit Recordings Reveal the Selectivity of a Human Face Area

Thomas Decramer, Elsie Premereur, Qi Zhu, Wim Van Paesschen, Johannes van Loon, Wim Vanduffel, Jessica Taubert, Peter Janssen, Tom Theys

2021Journal of Neuroscience42 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The exquisite capacity of primates to detect and recognize faces is crucial for social interactions. Although disentangling the neural basis of human face recognition remains a key goal in neuroscience, direct evidence at the single-neuron level is limited. We recorded from face-selective neurons in human visual cortex in a region characterized by functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) activations for faces compared with objects. The majority of visually responsive neurons in this fMRI activation showed strong selectivity at short latencies for faces compared with objects. Feature-scrambled faces and face-like objects could also drive these neurons, suggesting that this region is not tightly tuned to the visual attributes that typically define whole human faces. These single-cell recordings within the human face processing system provide vital experimental evidence linking previous imaging studies in humans and invasive studies in animal models. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT We present the first recordings of face-selective neurons in or near an fMRI-defined patch in human visual cortex. Our unbiased multielectrode array recordings (i.e., no selection of neurons based on a search strategy) confirmed the validity of the BOLD contrast (faces–objects) in humans, a finding with implications for all human imaging studies. By presenting faces, feature-scrambled faces, and face-pareidolia (perceiving faces in inanimate objects) stimuli, we demonstrate that neurons at this level of the visual hierarchy are broadly tuned to the features of a face, independent of spatial configuration and low-level visual attributes.

Topics & Concepts

Functional magnetic resonance imagingVisual cortexNeuroscienceComputer scienceArtificial intelligenceFace (sociological concept)Pattern recognition (psychology)Human visual system modelHuman brainComputer visionContrast (vision)Visual processingNeurophysiologyVisual perceptionFacial expressionElectrophysiologyBrain mappingVisualizationPsychologyHierarchyNeural activitySelection (genetic algorithm)CommunicationPremovement neuronal activityFunctional imagingVisual searchPsychophysicsFacial recognition systemVisual systemFusiform face areaPerceptionHuman studiesCortex (anatomy)Cognitive neuroscience of visual object recognitionMagnetic resonance imagingFace detectionFace Recognition and PerceptionNeural and Behavioral Psychology StudiesVisual perception and processing mechanisms