PROJECT SUMMARY
There is a fundamental gap in our understanding of the neural mechanisms supporting the recognition of
complexly structured information like faces. The existence of this conceptual gap constitutes an important
problem because, until it is filled, we will not be able to explain face recognition and the reasons for its impairment
in neurodevelopmental disorders like autism or face blindness. The long-term goal is to understand the neural
mechanisms of face recognition and build an artificial face-recognition system implementing neural computations
and thus explain face recognition mechanistically. The overall objective of this proposal is the identification of
the neural mechanisms and computations by which face-processing systems support active face recognition.
The experimental model system consists of interconnected brain areas, each with a unique functional
specialization, currently thought to support face identification in a feed-forward manner. The central hypothesis
is that the face-processing system is instead designed to make information at multiple levels of perceptual
organization explicit from facial feature, to face, to person, to the layout and meaning of an entire scene. The
hypothesis is rooted in a series of experimental observations in the principal applicant’s laboratory. The rationale
for this proposal is that completion of the proposed research will provide an understanding, in a model system,
of how neural populations generate compositional, structured representations, imposing critical constraints on
theories of cortex, intelligence, and active vision. The hypothesis will be tested by pursuing three specific aims:
1) Determine Rules of Part-Whole Interaction for Face Recognition, 2) Determine Mechanisms of Context-
Modulation in Face Areas, and 3) Determine Population Codes for Complex Visual Scene Processing. Functional
magnetic resonance imaging to localize face and body areas will be combined with electrophysiological
recordings targeted to these regions and analyses of computational model systems to determine how facial
feature integration into the holistic structure of the face shapes face identification, to determine the mechanisms
by which object and body context impact face representations, and to elucidate the extent and form of social
information codes in these areas supporting active high-level scene processing. The approach is innovative,
because it fundamentally challenges the standard model of the circuits of face-processing, aiming to reveal the
mechanisms supporting information processing at multiple levels of perceptual organization with a focus on
extracting general principles of cortical circuit operations for high-level vision. The proposed research is
significant, because it will provide a mechanistic understanding of the operations of complex neural circuits and
how they implement computations that extract and package socially highly important information. Because the
outcome is an advance in understanding circuit mechanisms of social perception, it will identify vulnerabilities of
the face-processing system directly relevant to the understanding of face blindness, prosopagnosia, and of
altered social perception in syndromes spanning autism spectrum disorders, fragile X, and Williams syndrome.
Public Health Relevance Statement
PROJECT NARRATIVE
The proposed research is relevant to public health because the neural mechanisms that underlie face processing
are essential to human social life, and altered social perception is characteristic of psychiatric disorders like
autism spectrum disorders, face blindness, Fragile X, and Williams syndrome. Studies proposed in this
application will examine how the brain processes visual information from features to objects and faces to their
relationships, and will thus help uncover the neuronal mechanisms of face recognition and social perception and
their impairments in neurodevelopmental disorders. Thus the proposed research is relevant to the part of the
NIH’s mission that pertains to reducing illness and disability.
NIH Spending Category
Eye Disease and Disorders of VisionNeurosciences
Project Terms
ArchitectureAreaBiological ModelsBlindnessBrainCellsCharacteristicsCodeCognitiveComplexComputer AnalysisDevelopmentDwarfismElectrophysiology (science)Experimental ModelsEyeFaceFace ProcessingFragile X SyndromeFunctional Magnetic Resonance ImagingFundingGoalsHumanImageImpairmentIntelligenceKnowledgeLaboratoriesLifeLightMacacaMental disordersMissionMotionNeurodevelopmental DisorderNeuronsOutcomeOutputPersonsPlant RootsPopulationPrevalenceProcessPropertyProsopagnosiaPublic HealthResearchRoleSeriesShapesSocial PerceptionSocial Well-BeingStandard ModelStimulusStructureSupport SystemSyndromeSystemTestingUnited States National Institutes of HealthVisionVisualWell in selfWilliams SyndromeWorkactive visionautism spectrum disorderdesigndisabilityinformation processinginnovationinsightneural circuitneuromechanismobject recognitionoperationorganizational structureperceptual organizationrelating to nervous systemresponseretinal imagingsocialtheoriesvisual informationvisual process
Eye Disease and Disorders of Vision; Neurosciences
Sub Projects
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Publications
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Outcomes
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