Abstract

Human beings do not passively perceive important social features about others such as race and age in social interactions. Instead, it is proposed that humans might continuously generate predictions about these social features based on prior similar experiences. Pre-awareness of racial information conveyed by others' faces enables individuals to act in “culturally appropriate” ways, which is useful for interpersonal relations in different ethnicity groups. However, little is known about the effects of prediction on the perception for own-race and other-race faces. Here, we addressed this issue using high temporal resolution event-related potential techniques. In total, data from 24 participants (13 women and 11 men) were analyzed. It was found that the N170 amplitudes elicited by other-race faces, but not own-race faces, were significantly smaller in the predictable condition compared to the unpredictable condition, reflecting a switch to holistic processing of other-race faces when those faces were predictable. In this respect, top-down prediction about face race might contribute to the elimination of the other-race effect (one face recognition impairment). Furthermore, smaller P300 amplitudes were observed for the predictable than for unpredictable conditions, which suggested that the prediction of race reduced the neural responses of human brains.

Highlights

  • In recent years, one of the topics of interest within face processing research has been the perception of own-race and other-race faces [1]

  • The current electrophysiological results showed that the N170 amplitudes elicited by other-race faces, but not own-race faces, were found to be significantly smaller in the predictable condition compared to the unpredictable condition

  • A wealth of research has examined the race effects of human faces, there is no study that directly investigates the influences of top-down prediction on the own-race and other-race face processing

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Summary

Introduction

One of the topics of interest within face processing research has been the perception of own-race and other-race faces [1]. Regarding electrophysiological studies on the perception of face race, a wealth of data is available. It has been shown in an old/new recognition paradigm that no effects of face race were observed on the amplitudes of P100 [2,3,4]. Following P100, a negative deflection peaking between 130 and 190 ms over occipito-temporal sites is usually observed in experiments using faces as stimuli [5, 6]. This so-called N170 is larger for faces compared to other stimulus categories [5]. Race effects were observed in P300, a component responding to motivationally-significant events [10]

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