[1] 彭小虎,罗跃嘉,魏景汉,等.面孔识别的认知模型与电生理学证据[J].心理科学进展,2002,10(3):241-247. [2] Rossion B, Gauthier I, Tarr MJ, et al. The N170 occipitotemporal component is delayed and enhanced to inverted faces but not to inverted objects:an electrophysiological account of face specific processes in the human brain[J]. Cognitive Neuroscience,2002,111(117):69-74. [3] Bentin S, Allison T, Puce A, et al. Electrophysiological studies of face perception in humans[J]. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience,1996,8:551-565. [4] Eimer M. Event-related brain potentials distinguish processing stages involved in face perception and reconition[J]. Clinical Neurophysiology,2000,111(4):694-705. [5] Blau VC, Maurer U, Tottenham N. The face-specific N170 component is modulated by emotional facial expression[J]. Behav Brain Funct,2007,23:3-7. [6] Langdell T. Recognition of faces: An approach to the study of autism[J]. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry and Allied Disciplines,1978,19:255-268. [7] McPartland J, Dawson G, Webb S, et al. Event-related brain potentials reveal anomalies in temporal rocessing of faces in autism spectrum disorder[J]. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry,2004,45:1235-1245. [8] Webb S, Dawson G,Bernier R,et al. ERP Evidence of Atypical Face Processing in Young Children with Autism[J]. J Autism Dev Disord,2006,36:881-890. [9] Gunji A, Inagaki M, Takeshima Y, et al. Event-related potentials of self-face recognition in children with pervasive developmental disorders[J]. Brain and Development,2009,31(2):139-147. [10] Boeschoten MA, Kenemans JL, van Engeland H, et al. Face processing in pervasive developmental disorder(PDD): The roles of expertise and spatial frequency[J]. Journal of Neural Transmission,2007,114:1619-1629. [11] Wong TK, Fung PC, Chua SE, et al. Abnormal spatiotemporal processing of emotional facial expressions in childhood autism: Dipole source analysis of eventrelated potentials[J]. European Journal of Neuroscience,2008,28:407-416. [12] Werheid K, Schachta A, Sommera W. Facial attractiveness modulates early and late event-related brain potentials[J]. Biological Psychology,2007,76(12):100-108. [13] Small JG, DeMyer MK, Milstein V. CNV responses of autistic and normal children[J]. Journal of Autism and Childhood Schizophrenia,1971,1:215-231. [14] Dawson G, Carver L, Meltzoff, et al. Neural correlates of face and object recognition in young children with autism spectrum disorder, developmental delay, and typical development[J]. Child Development,2002,73:700-717. [15] Webb SJ, Jones EJ, Merkle K, et al. Response to familiar faces, newly familiar faces, and novel faces as assessed by ERPs is intact in adults with autism spectrum disorders[J]. International Journal of Psychophysiology,2010,77(2):106-117. [16] Dawson G, Webb SJ, Carver L, et al. Young children with autism show atypical brain responses to fearful versus neutral facial expressions of emotion[J]. Dev Sci,2004,7(3):340-359. [17] O'Connor K, Hamm JP, Kirk IJ. The neurophysiological correlates of face processing in adults and children with Asperger’s syndrome[J]. Brain and Cognition,2005,59:82-95. [18] Maekawa T, Tobimatsu S, Inada N, et al. Top-down and bottom-up visual information processing of non-social stimuli in high-functioning autism spectrum disorder[J]. Research in Autism Spectrum Disorders,2010,5(1):201-209. [19] Jemel B, Mottron L, Dawson M. Impaired Face Processing in Autism: Fact or Artifact?[J]. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders,2006,36(1):91-106. |