Abstract
Are all faces recognized in the same way, or does previous
experience with a face change how it is retrieved? Previous research
using human scalp-recorded Event-Related Potentials (ERPs) demonstrates
that recognition memory can produce dissociable brain signals under a
variety of circumstances. While many studies have reported dissociations
between the putative ‘dual processes’ of familiarity and recollection, a
growing number of reports demonstrate that recollection itself may be
fractionated into component processes. Many recognition memory studies
using lexical materials as stimuli have reported a left parietal ERP
old/new effect for recollection; however, when unfamiliar faces are
recollected, an anterior effect can be observed. This paper addresses
two separate hypotheses concerning the functional significance of the
anterior old/new effect: perceptual retrieval and semantic status. The
perceptual retrieval view is that the anterior effect reflects
reinstatement of perceptual information bound up in an episodic
representation, while the semantic status view is that information not
represented in semantic memory
pre-experimentally elicits the anterior effect instead of the left
parietal effect. We tested these two competing accounts by investigating
recognition memory for unfamiliar faces and famous faces in two
separate experiments, in which same or different pictures of studied
faces were presented as test items to permit brain activity associated
with retrieving face and perceptual information to be examined
independently. The difference in neural activity between same and
different picture hits was operationalized as a pattern of activation
associated with perceptual retrieval; while the contrast between
different picture hits and correct rejection of new faces was assumed to
reflect face retrieval. In Experiment 1, using unfamiliar faces, the
anterior old/new effect (500–700 ms) was observed for face retrieval but
not for perceptual retrieval, challenging the perceptual retrieval
hypothesis. In Experiment 2, using famous faces, face retrieval was
associated with a left parietal effect (500–700 ms), supporting the semantic representation hypothesis. A between-subjects
analysis comparing scalp topography across the two experiments found
that the anterior effect observed for unfamiliar faces is dissociable
from the left parietal effect found for famous faces. This pattern of
results supports the hypothesis that
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 292-301 |
Number of pages | 10 |
Journal | Neuropsychologia |
Volume | 119 |
Early online date | 7 Aug 2018 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Oct 2018 |
Keywords
- Episodic memory
- ERPs
- Face recognition
- Recognition memory
- Recollection
- Semantic memory