The neural correlates of face individuation - the acquisition of memory representations for novel faces - have been studied only in coarse detail and disregarding individual differences between learners. In their seminal study, Tanaka et al. (Tanaka et al. 2006 J. Cogn. Neurosci. 18, 1488-1497. (doi:10.1162/jocn.2006.18.9.1488)) required the identification of a particular novel face across 70 trials and found that the N250 component in the EEG event-related potentials became more negative from the first to the second half of the experiment, where it reached a similar amplitude as a well-known face. We were unable to directly replicate this finding in our study when we used the original split of trials. However, when we applied a different split of trials we observed very similar changes in N250 amplitude. We conclude that the N250 component is indeed sensitive to the build-up of a robust representation of a face in memory; the time course of this process appears to vary as a function of variables that may be determined in future research.
CITATION STYLE
Sommer, W., Stapor, K., Kończak, G., Kotowski, K., Fabian, P., Ochab, J., … Ślusarczyk, G. (2021). The N250 event-related potential as an index of face familiarity: A replication study. Royal Society Open Science, 8(6). https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.202356
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