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Personal familiarity of faces, animals, objects, and scenes: Distinct perceptual and overlapping conceptual representations

Wiese, Holger; Schipper, Maya; Popova, Tsvetomila; Burton, A. Mike; Young, Andrew W.

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Authors

Maya Schipper

A. Mike Burton

Andrew W. Young



Abstract

While face, object, and scene recognition are often studied at a basic categorization level (e.g. “a face”, “a car”, “a kitchen”), we frequently recognise individual items of these categories as unique entities (e.g. “my mother”, “my car”, “my kitchen”). This recognition of individual identity is essential to appropriate behaviour in our world. However, relatively little is known about how we recognise individually familiar visual stimuli. Using event-related brain potentials, the present study examined whether and to what extent the underlying neural representations of personally familiar items are similar or different across different categories. In three experiments, we examined the recognition of personally highly familiar faces, animals, indoor scenes, and objects. We observed relatively distinct familiarity effects in an early time window (200-400 ms), with a clearly right-lateralized occipito-temporal scalp distribution for human faces and more bilateral and posterior distributions for other stimulus categories, presumably reflecting access to at least partly discrete visual long-term representations. In contrast, we found clearly overlapping familiarity effects in a later time window (starting 400 to 500 ms after stimulus onset), again with a mainly right occipito-temporal scalp distribution, for all stimulus categories. These later effects appear to reflect the sustained activation of conceptual properties relevant to any potential interaction. We conclude that familiarity for items from the various visual stimulus categories tested here is represented differently at the perceptual level, while relatively overlapping conceptual mechanisms allow for the preparation of impending potential interaction with the environment.

Citation

Wiese, H., Schipper, M., Popova, T., Burton, A. M., & Young, A. W. (2023). Personal familiarity of faces, animals, objects, and scenes: Distinct perceptual and overlapping conceptual representations. Cognition, 241, Article 105625. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cognition.2023.105625

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Sep 14, 2023
Online Publication Date Sep 26, 2023
Publication Date 2023-12
Deposit Date Sep 27, 2023
Publicly Available Date Sep 27, 2023
Journal Cognition
Print ISSN 0010-0277
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 241
Article Number 105625
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cognition.2023.105625
Keywords Object recognition, Scene recognition, Event-related potentials, Face recognition, Personal familiarity
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1750451

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