Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
924698 Brain and Cognition 2012 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

In two behavioral experiments involving lateralized stimulus presentation, we tested whether one of the most commonly used measures of holistic face processing—the composite face effect—would be more pronounced for stimuli presented to the right as compared to the left hemisphere. In experiment 1, we investigated the composite face effect in a verbal identification task, similar to its original report (Young, Hellawell, & Hay, 1987). Aligning top and bottom halves of composite face stimuli led to performance decreases irrespective of hemifield, indicating holistic processing of comparable magnitude for inputs provided separately to either hemisphere. However, when matching of the same top parts was required in experiment 2, an alignment-dependent performance decrease was found for stimuli presented in the left, but not right visual field. These observations suggest that the right hemisphere dominates in early stages of holistic processing, as indexed by the composite face effect, but that later processes such as face identification and naming are based on unified representations that are independent of input lateralization. Moreover, the composite face effect may not rely on the exact same representation(s) when measured in matching and identification tasks.

► First study of holistic face perception using composite face effect and divided VF paradigm. ► Use of personally familiar stimuli to ensure robust underlying face representations. ► Verbal identification: comparable alignment-related performance drop for RVF/LVF stimulation. ► Delayed matching: performance drops with alignment only for faces presented in LVF. ► Lateralization of holistic face perception is determined by specific task demands.

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