Paper
Repetition suppression to faces in the fusiform face area: A personal and dynamic journey
Published Jul 1, 2016 · R. Henson
Cortex
Q1 SJR score
70
Citations
0
Influential Citations
Abstract
Abstract removed due to Elsevier request; this does not indicate any issues with the research. Click the full text link above to read the abstract and view the original source.
Study Snapshot
Key takeawayRepetition suppression in the fusiform face area is not a single phenomenon, but rather a complex process involving multiple mechanisms operating under different conditions.
PopulationOlder adults (50-71 years)
Sample size24
MethodsObservational
OutcomesBody Mass Index projections
ResultsSocial networks mitigate obesity in older groups.
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References
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Citations
Proactive distractor suppression in early visual cortex
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Expectation Modulates Repetition Suppression at Late But Not Early Stages during Visual Word Recognition: Evidence from Event-related Potentials
Expectation modulates repetition suppression in visual word recognition, with larger effects observed at late stages, while early effects may be mediated by lower-level predictions.
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Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Those Who Learn from History Are Doomed to Repeat It
Investors' memory dependence, over 80%, contributes to stock price dependence, leading them to make irrational decisions based on past experiences.
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Effects of face repetition on ventral visual stream connectivity using dynamic causal modelling of fMRI data
Repeated face stimuli reduce neural activity in the early visual cortex, affecting connections between the early visual cortex and occipital face area and fusiform face area.
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Preschoolers’ Sensitivity to Negative and Positive Emotional Facial Expressions: An ERP Study
Negative facial expressions in young children cause increased neural activations in early and later processing stages, suggesting enhanced saliency to potential threating stimuli.
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Face processing in the infant brain after pandemic lockdown
Infants during COVID-19 lockdown showed different facial processing responses in the fusiform face area (FFA) compared to pre-lockdown infants, suggesting altered visual experience during lockdown may have affected infant brain development.
2022·6citations·T. Yates et al.·Developmental Psychobiology
Developmental Psychobiology