J. Martin-Malivel and K. Okada (2007, this issue) reported that chimpanzees raised with extensive social contact with humans show face discrimination abilities for human faces that exceed those for conspecific faces. Martin-Malivel and Okada have placed this finding in the theoretical context of the relative role of experience and innate face representations. The present article discusses the logic of the various styles of studies relevant to this question-considering primates without prior visual experience, sensitive periods, perceptual narrowing, childhood development, other-species effects, other-race effects, social quality of experience with nonconspecifics, and perceived social group membership-and also reviews the key current data. ...
Face pareidolia is the misperception of a face in an inanimate object and is a common error of the f...
Previous studies have demonstrated the sensitivity of chimpanzees to facial configurations. Three st...
Primates developed the ability to recognize and individuate their conspecifics by the face. Despite ...
The abilities to identify individuals within the group, and to interpret their expressions and inten...
International audienceThe ability to identify individuals within the group, and to interpret their e...
Humans and chimpanzees demonstrate numerous cognitive specializations for processing faces, but comp...
Impaired face recognition for certain face categories, such as faces of other species or other age c...
International audienceTypical human adults recognize numerous individuals from their faces accuratel...
Highly social animals possess a well-developed ability to distinguish the faces of familiar from nov...
Humans live in complex societies that involve a variety of types of interaction, including those ch...
An essential characteristic of primates is social cognition. Social cognition is an evolutionary res...
ABSTRACT—Experience with certain types of faces during the first year of development defines which t...
Many species use facial features to identify conspecifics, which is necessary to navigate a complex ...
SummaryAccurate recognition of individuals is a foundation of social cognition. The remarkable abili...
Face recognition in humans is a complex cognitive skill that requires sensitivity to unique configur...
Face pareidolia is the misperception of a face in an inanimate object and is a common error of the f...
Previous studies have demonstrated the sensitivity of chimpanzees to facial configurations. Three st...
Primates developed the ability to recognize and individuate their conspecifics by the face. Despite ...
The abilities to identify individuals within the group, and to interpret their expressions and inten...
International audienceThe ability to identify individuals within the group, and to interpret their e...
Humans and chimpanzees demonstrate numerous cognitive specializations for processing faces, but comp...
Impaired face recognition for certain face categories, such as faces of other species or other age c...
International audienceTypical human adults recognize numerous individuals from their faces accuratel...
Highly social animals possess a well-developed ability to distinguish the faces of familiar from nov...
Humans live in complex societies that involve a variety of types of interaction, including those ch...
An essential characteristic of primates is social cognition. Social cognition is an evolutionary res...
ABSTRACT—Experience with certain types of faces during the first year of development defines which t...
Many species use facial features to identify conspecifics, which is necessary to navigate a complex ...
SummaryAccurate recognition of individuals is a foundation of social cognition. The remarkable abili...
Face recognition in humans is a complex cognitive skill that requires sensitivity to unique configur...
Face pareidolia is the misperception of a face in an inanimate object and is a common error of the f...
Previous studies have demonstrated the sensitivity of chimpanzees to facial configurations. Three st...
Primates developed the ability to recognize and individuate their conspecifics by the face. Despite ...