Abstract
In face identification, it has been controversial whether or not access to biographical information and to a person's name are mediated by qualitatively different loci. We recorded ERPs while participants saw two successive faces and performed a matching task that either required retrieval of semantic information ("same or different profession?"), or retrieval of the person's name ("same or different number of forename syllables?"). For both tasks, slow ERP activity between the first and the second face was characterized by a prominent right posterior negativity, with the asymmetry being larger for the name than the semantic matching task. ERPs to the second face showed a difference between congruent (matching) and incongruent (mismatching) trials, with more negative ERPs for incongruent trials. In the semantic matching task, these differences were significant between 450 and 550 ms, and resembled an N400, with a maximum negativity over the vertex. In the name matching task, the topography of this congruency effect was qualitatively different from that seen in semantic matching. These findings suggest that different brain substrates mediate the access to semantic and name information. (C) 2003 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 314-326 |
Number of pages | 13 |
Journal | Cognitive Brain Research |
Volume | 17 |
Issue number | 2 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Jul 2003 |
Keywords
- event-related potential
- face perception
- matching
- semantic processing
- name retrieval
- HUMAN RIGHT-HEMISPHERE
- ELECTROPHYSIOLOGICAL EVIDENCE
- PERSONAL NAMES
- WORKING-MEMORY
- TEMPORAL-LOBE
- PROPER-NAMES
- RECOGNITION
- FAMILIAR
- PEOPLE
- EXPRESSION