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ORIGINAL RESEARCH: ORIGINAL CONTRIBUTIONS

Transient Inability to Distinguish Between Faces: Electrophysiologic Studies

Mundel, Trevor*; Milton, John G.; Dimitrov, Alexander; Wilson, Hugh W.§; Pelizzari, Charles|; Uftring, Stephen; Torres, Ivan#; Erickson, Robert K.**; Spire, Jean-Paul†**; Towle, Vernon L. PhD†**

Author Information

*Pfizer, Inc., Ann Arbor Laboratories, Michigan, USA; Departments of

†Neurology,

|Radiation and Cellular Oncology,

¶Radiology, and

**Surgery, The University of Chicago, Illinois, USA;

‡Center for Computational Biology, Montana State University, Bozeman, Montana, USA;

§Department of Biology, York University, Toronto, Canada;

#Department of Psychology, Simon Fraser University

Supported by the NIMH (J.M.), National Institutes of Health (V.L.T.), and The Brain Research Foundation (J.M., V.L.T.).

Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. John G. Milton, Department of Neurology, MC 2030, The University of Chicago, 5841 South Maryland Avenue, Chicago, IL 60637 U.S.A.; e-mail:[email protected]

Journal of Clinical Neurophysiology20(2):p 102-110, April 2003.

Abstract

It is not known with certainty at which level of face processing by the cortex the distinction between a familiar and an unfamiliar face is made. Subdural electrodes were implanted under the fusiform gyrus of the right temporal lobe in a patient who developed an unusual inability to distinguish differences between faces as part of the epileptic aura (“all faces looked the same”). A cortical region located posterior to the epileptic focus was identified that exhibited a maximum evoked response to the presentation of facial images (N165), but not to objects, scenes, or character strings. Evoked potentials elicited by a variety of visual images indicated that any perturbation away from novel whole-face stimuli produced submaximal responses from this region of the right temporal lobe. Electrical stimulation of this region resulted in an impairment of face discrimination. It was found that presentation of familiar faces (grandmother, treating physician) produced a different response from that observed for novel faces. These observations demonstrate that within 165 msec of face presentation, and before the conscious precept of face familiarity has formed, this cortical region has already begun to distinguish between a familiar and an unfamiliar face.

Copyright © 2003 American Clinical Neurophysiology Society

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Journal of Clinical Neurophysiology20(2):102-110, April 2003.
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