Abstract
Recent functional imaging, neuropsychological and electrophysiological studies on adults have provided evidence for a fast, low-spatial-frequency, subcortical face-detection pathway that modulates the responses of certain cortical areas to faces and other social stimuli. These findings shed light on an older literature on the face-detection abilities of newborn infants, and the hypothesis that these newborn looking preferences are generated by a subcortical route. Converging lines of evidence indicate that the subcortical face route provides a developmental foundation for what later becomes the adult cortical 'social brain' network, and that disturbances to this pathway might contribute to certain developmental disorders. © 2005 Nature Publishing Group.
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CITATION STYLE
Johnson, M. H. (2005). Subcortical face processing. Nature Reviews Neuroscience. Nature Publishing Group. https://doi.org/10.1038/nrn1766
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