All-or-none neural mechanisms underlying face categorization: evidence from the N170

Author:

Jin Haiyang123ORCID,Hayward William G4,Corballis Paul M12

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychology , University of Auckland, 23 Symonds Street, Auckland Central, Auckland, 1010 , New Zealand

2. Centre for Brain Research , University of Auckland, 85 Park Road, Grafton, Auckland 1023 , New Zealand

3. Department of Psychology , New York University Abu Dhabi, PO Box 129188, Saadiyat Island, Abu Dhabi , United Arab Emirates

4. Department of Psychology , University of Hong Kong, Centennial Campus, Pokfulam Road, Hong Kong, China

Abstract

Abstract Categorization of visual stimuli is an intrinsic aspect of human perception. Whether the cortical mechanisms underlying categorization operate in an all-or-none or graded fashion remains unclear. In this study, we addressed this issue in the context of the face-specific N170. Specifically, we investigated whether N170 amplitudes grade with the amount of face information available in an image, or a full response is generated whenever a face is perceived. We employed linear mixed-effects modeling to inspect the dependency of N170 amplitudes on stimulus properties and duration, and their relationships to participants’ subjective perception. Consistent with previous studies, we found a stronger N170 evoked by faces presented for longer durations. However, further analysis with equivalence tests revealed that this duration effect was eliminated when only faces perceived with high confidence were considered. Therefore, previous evidence supporting the graded hypothesis is more likely to be an artifact of mixing heterogeneous “all” and “none” trial types in signal averaging. These results support the hypothesis that the N170 is generated in an all-or-none manner and, by extension, suggest that categorization of faces may follow a similar pattern.

Funder

General Research Fund of the Hong Kong Research

China Scholarship Council

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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