“…The available evidence clearly supports the notion of age-related neural dedifferentiation of category information. Focusing on age differences in the representation of 6 broader categories such as faces, houses, or objects within the ventral visual cortex (VVC;Park et al, 2004Park et al, , 2012Payer et al, 2006;Srokova et al, 2020;Voss et al, 2008), previous studies made use of the preferential response of these regions to specific stimulus categories (Epstein and Kanwisher, 1998;Grill-Spector and Malach, 2004;Kanwisher et al, 1997). For example, using conventional univariate analyses, Park et al (2004) demonstrated that, compared to young adults, older adults exhibited less category-selective blood oxygen level dependent (BOLD) responses to stimuli of faces, houses, chairs, and pseudowords, providing the first human evidence for age-related neural dedifferentiation in the VVC (see also Park et al, 2012;Payer et al, 2006, and, accounting for trial-wise BOLD variability: Voss et al, 2008).…”