“…Facial processing of salient features includes not only analysis of a presented face, but also analysis of the emotional expression, gaze, and visuospatial motion, particularly speech-related lip movements (Bruce and Young, 1986). In addition to regions associated with the salience network, Cluster 1 included convergence in sensorimotor and premotor areas, driven by tasks associated with facial imitation and movement execution; lateral prefrontal cortex, explained by an association with cognitively demanding tasks (e.g., facial n-back task; Bzdok et al, 2012; Luo et al, 2014); and the superior temporal sulcus, which has been linked to assessment of gaze (Hoffman and Haxby, 2000; Grosbras et al, 2005), perceiving speech and non-speech mouth movements (Calvert et al, 1997; Puce et al, 1998; Rolls, 2007), and voice discrimination (Belin et al, 2000; Shah et al, 2001). Overall, Cluster 1 presented as the most heterogeneous grouping of tasks and appeared to represent a conflation across attention (Fox et al, 2005) and visuomotor responses to faces.…”