Abstract

The human face is one of the most frequently used stimuli in vMMN (visual mismatch negativity) research. Previous studies showed that vMMN is sensitive to facial emotions and gender, but investigations of age-related vMMN differences are relatively rare. The aim of this study was to investigate whether the models’ age in photographs were automatically detected, even if the photographs were not parts of the ongoing task. Furthermore, we investigated age-related differences, and the possibility of different sensitivity to photographs of participants’ own versus different ages. We recorded event-related potentials (ERPs) to faces of young and old models in younger (N = 20; 18–30 years) and older groups (N = 20; 60–75 years). The faces appeared around the location of the field of a tracking task. In sequences the young or the old faces were either frequent (standards) or infrequent (deviants). According to the results, a regular sequence of models’ age is automatically registered, and faces violating the models’ age elicited the vMMN component. However, in this study vMMN emerged only in the older group to same-age deviants. This finding is explained by the less effective inhibition of irrelevant stimuli in the elderly, and corresponds to own-age bias effect of recognition studies.

Highlights

  • The information content of the human face encompasses various important pieces of information such as identity, gender, race, age, and emotional state

  • In this study our aim was to investigate the possibility of automatic registration of age by using the visual mismatch negativity component of the event-related potentials (ERPs) of the brain electric activity

  • Visual mismatch negativity emerges to visual events that violate the regularities of a stimulus sequence, even if the eliciting stimuli are unrelated to an ongoing task

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Summary

Introduction

The information content of the human face encompasses various important pieces of information such as identity, gender, race, age, and emotional state. This set has utmost importance in interpersonal and social behavior. Visual mismatch negativity emerges to visual events that violate the regularities of a stimulus sequence, even if the eliciting stimuli are unrelated to an ongoing task (for reviews see Kimura et al, 2011; Stefanics et al, 2015). VMMN is usually investigated in the passive oddball paradigm In this paradigm participants perform a visual (or sometimes auditory) task, while the vMMNrelated events are presented outside the task’s context as unattended stimuli.

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