Authors
Marco Buiatti, Elisa Di Giorgio, Manuela Piazza, Carlo Polloni, Giuseppe Menna, Fabrizio Taddei, Ermanno Baldo, Giorgio Vallortigara
Publication date
2019/3/5
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
116
Issue
10
Pages
4625-4630
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Humans are endowed with an exceptional ability for detecting faces, a competence that, in adults, is supported by a set of face-specific cortical patches. Human newborns, already shortly after birth, preferentially orient to faces, even when they are presented in the form of highly schematic geometrical patterns vs. perceptually equivalent nonfacelike stimuli. The neural substrates underlying this early preference are still largely unexplored. Is the adult face-specific cortical circuit already active at birth, or does its specialization develop slowly as a function of experience and/or maturation? We measured EEG responses in 1- to 4-day-old awake, attentive human newborns to schematic facelike patterns and nonfacelike control stimuli, visually presented with slow oscillatory “peekaboo” dynamics (0.8 Hz) in a frequency-tagging design. Despite the limited duration of newborns’ attention, reliable frequency-tagged …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
M Buiatti, E Di Giorgio, M Piazza, C Polloni, G Menna… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2019