Abstract

To investigate the neural representations of faces in primates, particularly in relation to their personal familiarity or unfamiliarity, neuronal activities were chronically recorded from the ventral portion of the anterior inferior temporal cortex (AITv) of macaque monkeys during the performance of a facial identification task using either personally familiar or unfamiliar faces as stimuli. By calculating the correlation coefficients between neuronal responses to the faces for all possible pairs of faces given in the task and then using the coefficients as neuronal population-based similarity measures between the faces in pairs, we analyzed the similarity/dissimilarity relationship between the faces, which were potentially represented by the activities of a population of the face-responsive neurons recorded in the area AITv. The results showed that, for personally familiar faces, different identities were represented by different patterns of activities of the population of AITv neurons irrespective of the view (e.g., front, 90° left, etc.), while different views were not represented independently of their facial identities, which was consistent with our previous report. In the case of personally unfamiliar faces, the faces possessing different identities but presented in the same frontal view were represented as similar, which contrasts with the results for personally familiar faces. These results, taken together, outline the neuronal representations of personally familiar and unfamiliar faces in the AITv neuronal population.

Highlights

  • Various types of information are embedded in faces, and this information is critically important for daily non-verbal communication between primate con-specifics [1]

  • We have already reported that the ventral portion of the anterior inferior temporal cortex (AITv) in monkeys showed selectivity to identities of faces and suggested that the area is crucial for face identification [16,17]

  • Personal familiarity of faces is a critical constraint upon the face processing of primates

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Summary

Introduction

Various types of information are embedded in faces, and this information is critically important for daily non-verbal communication between primate con-specifics [1]. It has been suggested that a neural circuitry specialized for the processing of faces exists in the primate brain, by non-human primate single-cell recording studies which have shown the existence of face-responsive neurons [2,3,4,5,6,7,8] and by human functional brain imaging studies [9,10,11], which have shown the existence of face-responsive areas. A single-cell recording study in monkeys provides a strong basis for characterizing the neural representations composed by individual neurons; our aim was to conduct this characterization based on single-cell recordings for personal familiarity or unfamiliarity

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