Human faces under natural illumination, and human eyes in their unique morphology, include specific contrast polarity relations that face-detection mechanisms could capitalise on. Newborns have been shown to preferentially orient to simple face-like patterns only when they contain face- or gaze-relevant contrast. We investigated whether human adults show similar preferential orienting towards schematic face-like stimuli, and whether this effect depends on the contrast polarity of the stimuli. In two experiments we demonstrate that upright schematic face-like patterns elicit faster eye movements in adult humans than inverted ones, and that this occurs only if they contain face- or gaze-relevant contrast information in the whole stimulus or i...
Human infants are highly sensitive to social information in their visual world. In laboratory settin...
From birth, infants prefer to look at faces that engage them in direct eye contact. In adults, direc...
Faces are salient social stimuli whose features attract a stereotypical pattern of fixations. The im...
Human faces under natural illumination, and human eyes in their unique morphology, include specific ...
Newborn infants orient preferentially toward face-like or “protoface” stimuli and recent studies sug...
Recent work suggests that a subcortical visual route may mediate rapid orienting towards faces in th...
Object-based attention operates on perceptual objects, opening the possibility that the costs and be...
Human eyes serve two key functions in face-to-face social interactions: they provide cues about a pe...
Faces convey many signals (i.e., gaze or expressions) essential for interpersonal interaction. We ha...
Vision begins with the encoding of contrast at specific orientations. Several works showed that huma...
Vision begins with the encoding of contrast at specific orientations. Several works showed that huma...
Vision begins with the encoding of contrast at specific orientations. Several works showed that huma...
There is currently no agreement as to how specific or general are the mechanisms underlying newborns...
We examined infants’ sensitivity to eye-gaze direction and its influence on object processing in 4-m...
Newborn infants orient preferentially toward face-like or "protoface" stimuli and recent studies sug...
Human infants are highly sensitive to social information in their visual world. In laboratory settin...
From birth, infants prefer to look at faces that engage them in direct eye contact. In adults, direc...
Faces are salient social stimuli whose features attract a stereotypical pattern of fixations. The im...
Human faces under natural illumination, and human eyes in their unique morphology, include specific ...
Newborn infants orient preferentially toward face-like or “protoface” stimuli and recent studies sug...
Recent work suggests that a subcortical visual route may mediate rapid orienting towards faces in th...
Object-based attention operates on perceptual objects, opening the possibility that the costs and be...
Human eyes serve two key functions in face-to-face social interactions: they provide cues about a pe...
Faces convey many signals (i.e., gaze or expressions) essential for interpersonal interaction. We ha...
Vision begins with the encoding of contrast at specific orientations. Several works showed that huma...
Vision begins with the encoding of contrast at specific orientations. Several works showed that huma...
Vision begins with the encoding of contrast at specific orientations. Several works showed that huma...
There is currently no agreement as to how specific or general are the mechanisms underlying newborns...
We examined infants’ sensitivity to eye-gaze direction and its influence on object processing in 4-m...
Newborn infants orient preferentially toward face-like or "protoface" stimuli and recent studies sug...
Human infants are highly sensitive to social information in their visual world. In laboratory settin...
From birth, infants prefer to look at faces that engage them in direct eye contact. In adults, direc...
Faces are salient social stimuli whose features attract a stereotypical pattern of fixations. The im...