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Original Research Article
Face processing is gated by visual spatial attention

1  Center for Cognitive Neuroscience, Duke University, USA
2  Department of Neurobiology, Duke University Medical Center, USA
3  Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, Duke University, USA
4  Department of Psychiatry, Duke University Medical Center, USA


Human perception of faces is widely believed to rely on automatic processing by a domain-specifi c, modular component of the visual system. Scalp-recorded event-related potential (ERP) recordings indicate that faces receive special stimulus processing at around 170 ms poststimulus onset, in that faces evoke an enhanced occipital negative wave, known as the N170, relative to the activity elicited by other visual objects. As predicted by modular accounts of face processing, this early face-specifi c N170 enhancement has been reported to be largely immune to the infl uence of endogenous processes such as task strategy or attention. However, most studies examining the infl uence of attention on face processing have focused on non-spatial attention, such as object-based attention, which tend to have longer-latency effects. In contrast, numerous studies have demonstrated that visual spatial attention can modulate the processing of visual stimuli as early as 80 ms poststimulus – substantially earlier than the N170. These temporal characteristics raise the question of whether this initial face-specifi c processing is immune to the infl uence of spatial attention. This question was addressed in a dual-visualstream ERP study in which the infl uence of spatial attention on the face-specifi c N170 could be directly examined. As expected, early visual sensory responses to all stimuli presented in an attended location were larger than responses evoked by those same stimuli when presented in an unattended location. More importantly, a signifi cant face-specifi c N170 effect was elicited by faces that appeared in an attended location, but not in an unattended one. In summary, early face-specifi c processing is not automatic, but rather, like other objects, strongly depends on endogenous factors such as the allocation of spatial attention. Moreover, these fi ndings underscore the extensive infl uence that top-down attention exercises over the processing of visual stimuli, including those of high natural salience.

Keywords: N170, ERPs, FFA, STS, event-related potentials, Visual attention

Citation: Crist RE, Wu C, Karp C and Woldorff MG (2008) Face processing is gated by visual spatial attention. Front. Hum. Neurosci. (2007) 1:10. doi:10.3389/neuro.09.010.2007

Received: 21 September 2007; paper pending published: 29 November 2007; accepted: 09 January 2008; published online: 28 March 2008.

Edited by: 
Robert T. Knight, University of California Berkeley, USA

Reviewed by: 
Leon Deouell, Interdisciplinary Center for Neural Computation, Hebrew University, Israel; The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel
Francisco Barcelo, University of Illes Balears, Spain

Copyright: © 2008 Crist, Wu, Karp and Woldorff. This is an open-access article subject to an exclusive license agreement between the authors and the Frontiers Research Foundation, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original authors and source are credited.

*Correspondence: Marty G. Woldorff, Center for Cognitive Neuroscience, Duke University, Box 90999, Durham, NC 27708-0999, USA. e-mail: woldorff@duke.edu
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