Does Face Image Statistics Predict a Preferred Spatial Frequency for Human Face Processing?

Biology – Quantitative Biology – Neurons and Cognition

Scientific paper

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6 pages, 11 figures, submitted to a peer-reviewed journal

Scientific paper

Psychophysical experiments suggested a relative importance of a narrow band of spatial frequencies for recognition of face identity in humans. There exists, however, no conclusive evidence of why it is that such frequencies are preferred. To address this question, I examined the amplitude spectra of a large number of face images, and observed that face spectra generally fall off steeper with spatial frequency compared to ordinary natural images. When external face features (like hair) are suppressed, then whitening of the corresponding mean amplitude spectra revealed higher response amplitudes at those spatial frequencies which are deemed important for processing face identity. The results presented here therefore provide support for that face processing characteristics match corresponding stimulus properties.

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