Abstract

Own-race faces are recognized more effectively than other-race faces. This phenomenon is referred to as other-race effect (ORE). Existing behavioral evidence suggests that one of the possible causes of ORE is that own-race faces are processed more holistically than other-race faces. However, little is known about whether such differences in processing also produce distinctive neural responses in the cortical face processing network. To bridge this gap, the present study used fMRI methodology and the composite face paradigm to examine the response patterns of the traditional face-preferential cortical areas (i.e., the bilateral fusiform face areas [FFA] and the bilateral occipital face areas [OFA]) elicited by own-race faces and other-race faces. We found that the right FFA exhibited a neural composite face effect only for own-race faces but not for other-race faces, even with the absence of the race-related difference in behavior composite face effect. These findings suggest that the right FFA plays a greater role in holistic processing of individual own-race faces than other-race faces. They also suggest that the neural composite effect observed in the right FFA is not the exact neural counterpart of the behavioral face composite effect. The findings of the present study revealed that, along the pathway of the bottom-up face processing, own-race faces and other-race faces presented the holistic processing difference as early as when they were processed in the right FFA.

Highlights

  • People recognize own-race faces faster and more accurately than other-race faces and this behavioral phenomenon is referred to as the other-race effect (ORE; Meissner and Brigham, 2001; Hugenberg et al, 2010; Young et al, 2012)

  • We examined the response patterns of the face-preferential cortical areas in the ventral occipitotemporal cortex elicited by own-race faces and other-race faces

  • Our most important finding was that the right FFA exhibited a neural composite face effect for own-race faces in terms of a release of adaptation but not for other-race faces, with the absence of the race-related difference in behavior composite face effect

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Summary

Introduction

People recognize own-race faces faster and more accurately than other-race faces and this behavioral phenomenon is referred to as the other-race effect (ORE; Meissner and Brigham, 2001; Hugenberg et al, 2010; Young et al, 2012). The composite face effect refers to the phenomenon that when participants are asked to recognize the top or bottom halves of a composite face with the top and bottom halves coming from different individuals, they recognize more accurately when the top and bottom halves of the faces are misaligned than when they are aligned (Young et al, 1987; for review, see Rossion, 2013) This difference in recognition accuracy is due to the fact that the top and bottom halves of the face stimuli are processed holistically by fusing the two halves as a whole. The top half or the bottom half cannot be readily recognized by itself (Rossion, 2013)

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