“…Of the three pictures of each identity, one was current, one related to adolescence, and one related to childhood. Based on the literature reviewed above, we expected: (i) larger late positivities to the self, compared to the others, whilst close‐friend exhibiting an intermediate position or similar to the unknown condition (Miyakoshi, Kanayama, Iidaka, & Ohira, 2010; Miyakoshi et al., 2008; Xu et al., 2017); (ii) ERP modulations would be enhanced for the self across life stages, in particular, related to current self‐faces (Apps, Tajadura‐Jiménez, Turley, & Tsakiris, 2012; Butler et al., 2013); (iii) the past self should be differentiated from the past close‐relative at some point in the neural processing; (iv) regarding early face processing, whereas the N170 modulations would be sensitive to facial structural changes, the N250 may be more responsive to facial identity and some degree of familiarity (Olivares et al., 2015); (v) along the different ERP components, the effect of self‐face processing compared to other faces would be relatively task‐independent (Humphreys & Sui, 2016), that is, despite asking participants to focus on different aspects of the stimuli in the different blocks.…”