RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Neural Signatures of Conscious Face Perception in an Inattentional Blindness Paradigm JF The Journal of Neuroscience JO J. Neurosci. FD Society for Neuroscience SP 10940 OP 10948 DO 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0145-15.2015 VO 35 IS 31 A1 Juliet P. Shafto A1 Michael A. Pitts YR 2015 UL http://www.jneurosci.org/content/35/31/10940.abstract AB Previous studies suggest that early stages of face-specific processing are performed preattentively and unconsciously, whereas conscious perception emerges with late-stage (>300 ms) neuronal activity. A conflicting view, however, posits that attention is necessary for face-specific processing and that early-to-mid latency neural responses (∼100–300 ms) correspond more closely with perceptual awareness. The current study capitalized on a recently developed method for manipulating attention and conscious perception during EEG recording (modified inattentional blindness paradigm) and used face stimuli that elicit a well known marker of early face processing, the N170 event-related potential (ERP). In Phase 1 of the experiment, subjects performed a demanding distracter task while line drawings of faces and matched control stimuli were presented in the center of their view. When queried, half of the subjects reported no awareness of the faces and were deemed inattentionally blind. In Phase 2, subjects performed the same distracter task, but now consciously perceived the face stimuli due to the intervening questioning. In Phase 3, subjects performed a discrimination task on the faces. Two primary contrasts were made: aware versus unaware (equally task irrelevant) and task-relevant versus task-irrelevant (equally aware). The N170 and a subsequent ERP component, the visual awareness negativity (∼260–300 ms), were absent during inattentional blindness and present in the aware conditions. The P3b (>300 ms) was absent for task-irrelevant faces, even when consciously perceived, and present only when the faces were task relevant. These results inform contemporary theories of conscious face perception in particular and visual attention and perceptual awareness in general.