Forschung
- Wertheimer Kolloquium
- Julia Karbach: Neurocognitive plasticity across the lifespan
- Andreas Reif: Vom Molekül zur Klinik und zurück
- David Kaplan: The Future of Quantitative Inquiry in the Social Sciences
- Guillaume Rousselet: Early face brain activity
- Roy Baumeister: How Rejection Affects People
- Melissa Võ: Reading Scenes
- Jeremy Wolfe: Dancing chickens and gorillas in the lung
- Prof. Silvia A. Bunge: Reasoning to learn, and learning to reason
- SoSe 2014
- WiSe 2013/2014
- SoSe 2012
- WiSe 2011/2012
Wertheimer-Kolloquium
Age-related and individual differences in the time-course and information content of early face brain activity
Dr. Guillaume Rousselet
University of Glasgow
Termin: 11. Juni 2015 Zeit: 16 Uhr c.t. Ort: Campus Westend, SH 1.104
In this talk I will present a quantification of age-related and individual differences in visual processing. I will show examples using simplified pictures of faces and textures, EEG recordings, and relatively simple tasks, demonstrating that ageing, at least in a cross-sectional design involving 120 participants, is associated with a slowing-down of visual processing. This ageing effect does not seem to be explainable by low-level factors, such as retinal illuminance, and these factors also fail to explain the large individual differences in processing speed. Using reverse-correlation and mutual information, I will describe how early face ERPs are mostly modulated by the presence of the contralateral eye area in both younger and older participants. However, with ageing, this contralateral eye sensitivity is delayed, weaker, less lateralised, and differently coded in the pattern of ERP responses.