Many Faces of Expertise: Fusiform Face Area in Chess Experts and Novices
نویسندگان
چکیده
منابع مشابه
Many faces of expertise: fusiform face area in chess experts and novices.
The fusiform face area (FFA) is involved in face perception to such an extent that some claim it is a brain module for faces exclusively. The other possibility is that FFA is modulated by experience in individuation in any visual domain, not only faces. Here we test this latter FFA expertise hypothesis using the game of chess as a domain of investigation. We exploited the characteristic of ches...
متن کاملFusiform Face Area in Chess Expertise
The ability to recognize faces is arguably one of the most important and most practiced skills. The possible functions of the fusiform face area (FFA), generally believed to be responsible for face recognition, also feature these two characteristics. On the one hand, there are claims that the FFA has evolved into a face specific module due to great importance of face processing. On the other, t...
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The fusiform face area (FFA) has often been used as an example of a brain module that was developed through evolution to serve a specific purpose-face processing. Many believe, however, that FFA is responsible for holistic processing associated with any kind of expertise. The expertise view has been tested with various stimuli, with mixed results. One of the main stumbling blocks in the FFA con...
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The fusiform face area (FFA) is considered to be a highly specialized brain module because of its central importance for face perception. However, many researchers claim that the FFA is a general visual expertise module that distinguishes between individual examples within a single category. Here, I circumvent the shortcomings of some previous studies on the FFA controversy by using chess stimu...
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What are the neural mechanisms of face recognition? It is believed that the network of face-selective areas, which spans the occipital, temporal, and frontal cortices, is important in face recognition. A number of previous studies indeed reported that face identity could be discriminated based on patterns of multivoxel activity in the fusiform face area and the anterior temporal lobe. However, ...
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: Journal of Neuroscience
سال: 2011
ISSN: 0270-6474,1529-2401
DOI: 10.1523/jneurosci.5727-10.2011