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(Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience. 2006;18:1488-1497.)
© 2006 The MIT Press

Activation of Preexisting and Acquired Face Representations: The N250 Event-related Potential as an Index of Face Familiarity

James W. Tanaka1, Tim Curran2, Albert L. Porterfield3 and Daniel Collins2

1 University of Victoria, Canada, 2 University of Colorado, 3 Oberlin College

Reprint requests should be sent to either James Tanaka, Department of Psychology, University of Victoria, PO Box 3050, STN CSC, Victoria, BC, V8W 3P5, Canada or Tim Curran, Department of Psychology, University of Colorado, Campus Box 345, Boulder, CO 80309-0345, USA, or via e-mail: jtanaka{at}uvic.ca (J. Tanaka), tcurran{at}buffmail.colorado.edu (T. Curran).

Electrophysiological studies using event-related potentials have demonstrated that face stimuli elicit a greater negative brain potential in right posterior recording sites 170 msec after stimulus onset (N170) relative to nonface stimuli. Results from repetition priming paradigms have shown that repeated exposures of familiar faces elicit a larger negative brainwave (N250r) at inferior temporal sites compared to repetitions of unfamiliar faces. However, less is known about the time course and learning conditions under which the N250 face representation is acquired. In the familiarization phase of the Joe/no Joe task, subjects studied a target "Joe" face ("Jane" for female subjects) and, during the course of the experiment, identified a series of sequentially presented faces as either Joe or not Joe. The critical stimulus conditions included the subject's own face, a same-sex Joe (Jane) face and a same-sex "other" face. The main finding was that the subject's own face produced a focal negative deflection (N250) in posterior channels relative to nontarget faces. The task-relevant Joe target face was not differentiated from other nontarget faces in the first half of the experiment. However, in the second half, the Joe face produced an N250 response that was similar in magnitude to the own face. These findings suggest that the N250 indexes two types of face memories: a preexperimentally familiar face representation (i.e., the "own face") and a newly acquired face representation (i.e., the Joe/Jane face) that was formed during the course of the experiment.




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