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Published April 4, 2022 | Supplemental Material + Published
Journal Article Open

Face neurons encode nonsemantic features

Abstract

The primate inferior temporal cortex contains neurons that respond more strongly to faces than to other objects. Termed "face neurons," these neurons are thought to be selective for faces as a semantic category. However, face neurons also partly respond to clocks, fruits, and single eyes, raising the question of whether face neurons are better described as selective for visual features related to faces but dissociable from them. We used a recently described algorithm, XDream, to evolve stimuli that strongly activated face neurons. XDream leverages a generative neural network that is not limited to realistic objects. Human participants assessed images evolved for face neurons and for nonface neurons and natural images depicting faces, cars, fruits, etc. Evolved images were consistently judged to be distinct from real faces. Images evolved for face neurons were rated as slightly more similar to faces than images evolved for nonface neurons. There was a correlation among natural images between face neuron activity and subjective "faceness" ratings, but this relationship did not hold for face neuron–evolved images, which triggered high activity but were rated low in faceness. Our results suggest that so-called face neurons are better described as tuned to visual features rather than semantic categories.

Additional Information

© 2022 the Author(s). Published by PNAS. This article is distributed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License 4.0 (CC-BY-NC-ND). Contributed by Margaret S. Livingstone; received October 13, 2021; accepted February 17, 2022; reviewed by Marlene Behrmann and Sabine Kastner. Published April 4, 2022. This work was supported by NIH Grants R01EY026025, R01EY16187, and P30EY12196 and NSF Grant CCF-1231216. C.R.P. was supported by a Packard Fellowship. Author contributions: A.B., W.X., C.R.P., M.S.L., and G.K. designed research; A.B.,W.X., C.R.P., and M.S.L. performed research; A.B.,W.X., and G.K. analyzed data; and A.B.,W.X., C.R.P., M.S.L., and G.K. wrote the paper. The authors declare no competing interest. Data Availability: Psychophysics and neural recording data have been deposited on the lab website and are publicly accessible (https://klab.tch.harvard.edu/resources/whatisafaceneuron.html), including part of data that were collected in previous work (18). This article contains supporting information online at https://www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.2118705119/-/DCSupplemental.

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Published - pnas.2118705119.pdf

Supplemental Material - pnas.2118705119.sapp.pdf

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Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 23, 2023