Recent work suggests that a subcortical visual route may mediate rapid orienting towards faces in the visual periphery. We now demonstrate that this orienting bias towards faces shows a temporal-nasal visual field asymmetry of responses, supporting the view that it is mediated by extrageniculate pathways. Upright schematic face-like pattern elicited faster behavioural responses than inverted one in the temporal but not in the nasal hemifield of each eye. This effect occurred for saccades but not for manual responses. The presence of a similar asymmetry of the orienting bias in newborns supports the role of extrageniculate pathways in face detection in both neonates and adults
Newborn infants orient preferentially toward face-like or “protoface” stimuli and recent studies sug...
Whilst many have argued for a right hemisphere advantage for the processing of emotional stimuli, re...
The specificity of face perception is thought to reside both in its dramatic vulnerability to pictur...
It has been proposed that newborns' preferential orienting to faces is primarily controlled by a sub...
A two-process theory of the development of face processing predicted that newborns' preferential ori...
Human faces under natural illumination, and human eyes in their unique morphology, include specific ...
Neuropsychological data indicate that face processing could be distributed among two functionally an...
Behavioral studies demonstrate that the efficiency of detection of faces is dependent on configural ...
In this study, we investigated nasal-temporal asymmetries resulting from exposure to visible facial ...
It is well established that human faces induce stronger involuntary orienting responses than other v...
Over the past few decades, evidence has accumulated showing that, at subcortical levels, visual atte...
Human faces induce stronger involuntary orienting responses than other visual objects. We recently r...
It has been proposed that newborns' preferential orienting to faces is solely controlled by a subcor...
Monocular viewing conditions show an asymmetry between stimuli presented in the temporal and nasal v...
Abstract Some elementary aspects of faces can be processed before cortical maturation or after lesio...
Newborn infants orient preferentially toward face-like or “protoface” stimuli and recent studies sug...
Whilst many have argued for a right hemisphere advantage for the processing of emotional stimuli, re...
The specificity of face perception is thought to reside both in its dramatic vulnerability to pictur...
It has been proposed that newborns' preferential orienting to faces is primarily controlled by a sub...
A two-process theory of the development of face processing predicted that newborns' preferential ori...
Human faces under natural illumination, and human eyes in their unique morphology, include specific ...
Neuropsychological data indicate that face processing could be distributed among two functionally an...
Behavioral studies demonstrate that the efficiency of detection of faces is dependent on configural ...
In this study, we investigated nasal-temporal asymmetries resulting from exposure to visible facial ...
It is well established that human faces induce stronger involuntary orienting responses than other v...
Over the past few decades, evidence has accumulated showing that, at subcortical levels, visual atte...
Human faces induce stronger involuntary orienting responses than other visual objects. We recently r...
It has been proposed that newborns' preferential orienting to faces is solely controlled by a subcor...
Monocular viewing conditions show an asymmetry between stimuli presented in the temporal and nasal v...
Abstract Some elementary aspects of faces can be processed before cortical maturation or after lesio...
Newborn infants orient preferentially toward face-like or “protoface” stimuli and recent studies sug...
Whilst many have argued for a right hemisphere advantage for the processing of emotional stimuli, re...
The specificity of face perception is thought to reside both in its dramatic vulnerability to pictur...