2003
DOI: 10.1162/089976603321891792
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Learning Innate Face Preferences

Abstract: Newborn humans preferentially orient to face-like patterns at birth, but months of experience with faces is required for full face processing abilities to develop. Several models have been proposed for how the interaction of genetic and evironmental influences can explain this data. These models generally assume that the brain areas responsible for newborn orienting responses are not capable of learning and are physically separate from those that later learn from real faces. However, it has been difficult to r… Show more

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Cited by 68 publications
(37 citation statements)
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“…For simplicity, the simulations bypassed V1, but including it leads to similar results (Bednar 2002;Bednar and Miikkulainen 2003). As for orientation, a variety of prenatal training conditions were simulated, to determine how different training patterns can lead to face preferences.…”
Section: Face Preference Experimentsmentioning
confidence: 95%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…For simplicity, the simulations bypassed V1, but including it leads to similar results (Bednar 2002;Bednar and Miikkulainen 2003). As for orientation, a variety of prenatal training conditions were simulated, to determine how different training patterns can lead to face preferences.…”
Section: Face Preference Experimentsmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…These RFs cause the network to respond to facelike schematic images (Figure 6), with total activity levels that rank the patterns in the order preferred by infants (Goren et al 1975;. When tested on 18 schematic patterns from newborn studies (Goren et al 1975;Valenza, Simion, Cassia, and Umiltà 1996), the full version of the model (including both V1 and the FSA) ranked them in the same preference order for all 22 of the statistically significant preferences found in newborns (Bednar 2002;Bednar and Miikkulainen 2003). These results demonstrate that a network exposed to three-dot patterns is sufficient to explain the experimental results with newborns tested with schematic stimuli.…”
Section: Face Preference Experimentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Computational units of LISSOM are cortical columns that continuously adapt to afferent and lateral inputs, and the units synchronize and desynchronize their activity. This model has been partially successful in interpreting neurobiological facts such as columnar map organization as well as patchy connectivity, recovery from retinal and cortical injury, psychophysical phenomena such as tilt after effect [7], contour integration, and preference for faces [5].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%