Conclusion Viewing faces of different people produces a larger BOLD response in FFA than viewing a block of identical faces (Andrew & Ewbank, 2004). But changing the viewpoint of the same person also produces a release from adaptation, compared to identical images (e.g., Fang, Murray & He, 2007)
Not all detectable differences between face images correspond to a change in identity. Here we measu...
Exposure to a face can bias subsequent judgments of other faces. Looking at a sad face, for instance...
Recent evidence indicates that comparison of two similar faces can aid subsequent discrimination bet...
UnrestrictedViewing a sequence of faces of two different people results in a greater Blood Oxygenati...
AbstractViewing a sequence of faces of two different people results in a greater Blood Oxygenation L...
ve d in g v in viewpoint, suggesting view-invariance. To determine whether broad view-tuning can acc...
The ability of observers to recognize faces across changes in viewpoint has been found previously to...
Almost all previous studies of face recognition have found that matching the same face depicted from...
Individual faces vary considerably in both the quality and quantity of the information they contain ...
The lack of controlled stimuli transformations is an obstacle to the study of face identity recognit...
AbstractAlmost all previous studies of face recognition have found that matching the same face depic...
AbstractIndividual faces vary considerably in both the quality and quantity of the information they ...
Can the effects of social comparison extend beyond explicit evaluation to visual self-representation...
<div><p>Recent evidence indicates that comparison of two similar faces can aid subsequent discrimina...
A distributed human neural system for face perception was proposed by Haxby et al. (2000), in which ...
Not all detectable differences between face images correspond to a change in identity. Here we measu...
Exposure to a face can bias subsequent judgments of other faces. Looking at a sad face, for instance...
Recent evidence indicates that comparison of two similar faces can aid subsequent discrimination bet...
UnrestrictedViewing a sequence of faces of two different people results in a greater Blood Oxygenati...
AbstractViewing a sequence of faces of two different people results in a greater Blood Oxygenation L...
ve d in g v in viewpoint, suggesting view-invariance. To determine whether broad view-tuning can acc...
The ability of observers to recognize faces across changes in viewpoint has been found previously to...
Almost all previous studies of face recognition have found that matching the same face depicted from...
Individual faces vary considerably in both the quality and quantity of the information they contain ...
The lack of controlled stimuli transformations is an obstacle to the study of face identity recognit...
AbstractAlmost all previous studies of face recognition have found that matching the same face depic...
AbstractIndividual faces vary considerably in both the quality and quantity of the information they ...
Can the effects of social comparison extend beyond explicit evaluation to visual self-representation...
<div><p>Recent evidence indicates that comparison of two similar faces can aid subsequent discrimina...
A distributed human neural system for face perception was proposed by Haxby et al. (2000), in which ...
Not all detectable differences between face images correspond to a change in identity. Here we measu...
Exposure to a face can bias subsequent judgments of other faces. Looking at a sad face, for instance...
Recent evidence indicates that comparison of two similar faces can aid subsequent discrimination bet...