Average faces are attractive, but what is average depends on experience. We examined the effect of brief exposure to consistent facial distortions on what looks normal (average) and what looks at-tractive. Adaptation to a consistent distortion shifted what looked most normal, and what looked most attractive, toward that distortion. These normality and attractiveness aftereffects occurred when the adapting and test faces differed in orientation by 9
Face recognition is superior to object recognition, but inversion disproportionately impairs face re...
The role of face typicality in face recognition is well established, but it is unclear whether face ...
Viewing a distorted face induces large aftereffects in the appearance of an undistorted face. The au...
Average faces are attractive, but what is average depends on experience. We examined the effect of b...
Although the Averageness Hypothesis of facial attractiveness proposes that the attractiveness of fac...
Although the averageness hypothesis of facial attractiveness proposes that the attractiveness of fac...
We examined figural aftereffects in images of human faces, for which changes in configuration are hi...
Images of faces manipulated to make their shapes closer to the average are perceived as more attract...
Psychological research shows clearly that average faces are attractive. Faces generally become more ...
Adaptation to distorted faces is commonly interpreted as a shift in the face-space norm for the adap...
It is generally thought that experience with faces recalibrates preferences to match the population ...
After prolonged exposure to a distorted face with expanded or contracted inner features, a subsequen...
The perceived configuration of a face can be strongly biased by prior adaptation to a face with a di...
Several recent demonstrations using visual adaptation have revealed high-level aftereffects for comp...
Averaged composite faces, created by blending sets of faces, are surprisingly attractive. Here we co...
Face recognition is superior to object recognition, but inversion disproportionately impairs face re...
The role of face typicality in face recognition is well established, but it is unclear whether face ...
Viewing a distorted face induces large aftereffects in the appearance of an undistorted face. The au...
Average faces are attractive, but what is average depends on experience. We examined the effect of b...
Although the Averageness Hypothesis of facial attractiveness proposes that the attractiveness of fac...
Although the averageness hypothesis of facial attractiveness proposes that the attractiveness of fac...
We examined figural aftereffects in images of human faces, for which changes in configuration are hi...
Images of faces manipulated to make their shapes closer to the average are perceived as more attract...
Psychological research shows clearly that average faces are attractive. Faces generally become more ...
Adaptation to distorted faces is commonly interpreted as a shift in the face-space norm for the adap...
It is generally thought that experience with faces recalibrates preferences to match the population ...
After prolonged exposure to a distorted face with expanded or contracted inner features, a subsequen...
The perceived configuration of a face can be strongly biased by prior adaptation to a face with a di...
Several recent demonstrations using visual adaptation have revealed high-level aftereffects for comp...
Averaged composite faces, created by blending sets of faces, are surprisingly attractive. Here we co...
Face recognition is superior to object recognition, but inversion disproportionately impairs face re...
The role of face typicality in face recognition is well established, but it is unclear whether face ...
Viewing a distorted face induces large aftereffects in the appearance of an undistorted face. The au...