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Decoding Face Information in Time,Frequency and Space from Direct Intracranial Recordings of the Human Brain
Authors:Naotsugu Tsuchiya  Hiroto Kawasaki  Hiroyuki Oya  Matthew A. Howard  III   Ralph Adolphs
Affiliation:1. Division of Humanities and Social Sciences, Caltech, Pasadena, California, United States of America.; 2. Department of Neurosurgery, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa, United States of America.; 3. Department of Neurology, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa, United States of America.; 4. Division of Biology, Caltech, Pasadena, California, United States of America.;Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand
Abstract:Faces are processed by a neural system with distributed anatomical components, but the roles of these components remain unclear. A dominant theory of face perception postulates independent representations of invariant aspects of faces (e.g., identity) in ventral temporal cortex including the fusiform gyrus, and changeable aspects of faces (e.g., emotion) in lateral temporal cortex including the superior temporal sulcus. Here we recorded neuronal activity directly from the cortical surface in 9 neurosurgical subjects undergoing epilepsy monitoring while they viewed static and dynamic facial expressions. Applying novel decoding analyses to the power spectrogram of electrocorticograms (ECoG) from over 100 contacts in ventral and lateral temporal cortex, we found better representation of both invariant and changeable aspects of faces in ventral than lateral temporal cortex. Critical information for discriminating faces from geometric patterns was carried by power modulations between 50 to 150 Hz. For both static and dynamic face stimuli, we obtained a higher decoding performance in ventral than lateral temporal cortex. For discriminating fearful from happy expressions, critical information was carried by power modulation between 60–150 Hz and below 30 Hz, and again better decoded in ventral than lateral temporal cortex. Task-relevant attention improved decoding accuracy more than10% across a wide frequency range in ventral but not at all in lateral temporal cortex. Spatial searchlight decoding showed that decoding performance was highest around the middle fusiform gyrus. Finally, we found that the right hemisphere, in general, showed superior decoding to the left hemisphere. Taken together, our results challenge the dominant model for independent face representation of invariant and changeable aspects: information about both face attributes was better decoded from a single region in the middle fusiform gyrus.
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