Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Regional Brain Activation Evoked When Approaching a Virtual Human on a Virtual Walk
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Behavioral Change and Its Neural Correlates in Visual Agnosia After Expertise Training
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Dissociations of Face and Object Recognition in Developmental Prosopagnosia
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Categorizing and Individuating Others: The Neural Substrates of Person Perception
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Is the Fusiform Face Area Specialized for Faces, Individuation, or Expert Individuation?
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Face-selective Activation in a Congenital Prosopagnosic Subject
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Long-Latency ERPs and Recognition of Facial Identity
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Neural Substrates of Action Event Knowledge
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Neural Specialization for Letter Recognition
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Categorical Perception of Happiness and Fear Facial Expressions: An ERP Study
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Structural Encoding of Human and Schematic Faces: Holistic and Part-Based Processes
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Prosopagnosia as a Deficit in Encoding Curved Surface
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
The Representation of Objects in the Human Occipital and Temporal Cortex
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Mental Imagery of Faces and Places Activates Corresponding Stiimulus-Specific Brain Regions
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Hemispheric Asymmetries for Whole-Based and Part-Based Face Processing in the Human Fusiform Gyrus
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
The Fusiform "Face Area" is Part of a Network that Processes Faces at the Individual Level
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Imaging Cognition II: An Empirical Review of 275 PET and fMRI Studies
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
III. Electrophysiological Studies of Face Processing in Williams Syndrome
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Can Face Recognition Really be Dissociated from Object Recognition?
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
The Neural Substrate of Picture Naming
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Implicit Trustworthiness Decisions: Automatic Coding of Face Properties in the Human Amygdala
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
The representation of parts and wholes in face-selective cortex
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Dynamic face recognition: From human to machine vision
Image and Vision Computing
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Perception of face parts and face configurations: An fmri study
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Neural correlates of human body perception
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Analysis of gray matter in AD patients and MCI subjects based voxel-based morphometry
BI'11 Proceedings of the 2011 international conference on Brain informatics
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Spiral topologies for biometric recognition
ASB'03 Proceedings of the 1st international conference on Advanced Studies in Biometrics
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Representations of facial identity in the left hemisphere require right hemisphere processing
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Processing of facial emotion in the human fusiform gyrus
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Robust selectivity for faces in the human amygdala in the absence of expressions
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
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The perception of faces is sometimes regarded as a specialized task involving discrete brain regions. In an attempt to identi$ face-specific cortex, we used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to measure activation evoked by faces presented in a continuously changing montage of common objects or in a similar montage of nonobjects. Bilateral regions of the posterior fusiform gyrus were activated by faces viewed among nonobjects, but when viewed among objects, faces activated only a focal right fusiform region. To determine whether this focal activation would occur for another category of familiar stimuli, subjects viewed flowers presented among nonobjects and objects. While flowers among nonobjects evoked bilateral fusiform activation, flowers among objects evoked no activation. These results demonstrate that both faces and flowers activate large and partially overlapping regions of inferior extrastriate cortex. A smaller region, located primarily in the right lateral fusiform gyrus, is activated specifically by faces.