Eye Fixation-Related Potentials during Visual Search on Acquaintance and Newly-Learned Faces

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Searching familiar faces in the crowd may involve stimulus-driven attention by emotional significance, together with goal-directed attention due to task-relevant needs. The present study investigated the effect of familiarity on attentional processes by exploring eye fixation-related potentials (EFRPs) and eye gazes when humans searched for, among other distracting faces, either an acquaintance's face or a newly-learned face. Task performance and gaze behavior were indistinguishable for identifying either faces. However, from the EFRP analysis, after a P300 component for successful search of target faces, we found greater deflections of right parietal late positive potentials in response to newly-learned faces than acquaintance's faces, indicating more involvement of goal-directed attention in processing newly-learned faces. In addition, we found greater occipital negativity elicited by acquaintance's faces, reflecting emotional responses to significant stimuli. These results may suggest that finding a familiar face in the crowd would involve lower goal-directed attention and elicit more emotional responses.
Publisher
MDPI
Issue Date
2021-02
Language
English
Article Type
Article
Citation

BRAIN SCIENCES, v.11, no.2

DOI
10.3390/brainsci11020218
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/312805
Appears in Collection
EE-Journal Papers(저널논문)
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