Matching the identities of unfamiliar faces is heavily influenced by variations in their images. Changes to viewpoint and lighting direction during face perception are commonplace across yaw and pitch axes and can result in dramatic image differences. We report two experiments that, for the first time, factorially investigate the combined effects of lighting and view angle on matching performance for unfamiliar faces. The use of three-dimensional head models allowed control of both lighting and viewpoint. We found viewpoint effects in the yaw axis with little to no effect of lighting. However, for rotations about the pitch axis, there were both viewpoint and lighting effects and these interacted where lighting effects were found only for fr...
Object recognition based solely on spatial characteristics can only hope to provide limited toleranc...
Everyday life requires us to recognize faces under transient changes in pose, expression and lightin...
Although faces form a very homogenous stimulus class, adults are real experts in recognizing them. I...
Matching the identities of unfamiliar faces is heavily influenced by variations in their images. Cha...
Eye movement studies in face perception have given us an insight to how the brain processes facial i...
How do people estimate the orientation of other people's faces? We observed that two images of a fac...
Unfamiliar face identification is concerningly error prone, especially across changes in viewing con...
The mechanisms held responsible for familiar face recognition are thought to be orientation dependen...
The mechanisms held responsible for familiar face recognition are thought to be orientation dependen...
How do observers recognize faces despite dramatic image variations that arise from changes in illumi...
In two experiments we examined the ability of human observers to recognize faces from novel viewpoin...
We directly compared recognition for faces following 0° – 75° viewpoint rotation about the yaw, pitc...
Recognition of unfamiliar faces is susceptible to image differences caused by angular sizes subtende...
People are excellent at identifying faces familiar to them, even from very low quality images, but a...
The face inversion effect, evidence that humans possess a specialized system for face processing, an...
Object recognition based solely on spatial characteristics can only hope to provide limited toleranc...
Everyday life requires us to recognize faces under transient changes in pose, expression and lightin...
Although faces form a very homogenous stimulus class, adults are real experts in recognizing them. I...
Matching the identities of unfamiliar faces is heavily influenced by variations in their images. Cha...
Eye movement studies in face perception have given us an insight to how the brain processes facial i...
How do people estimate the orientation of other people's faces? We observed that two images of a fac...
Unfamiliar face identification is concerningly error prone, especially across changes in viewing con...
The mechanisms held responsible for familiar face recognition are thought to be orientation dependen...
The mechanisms held responsible for familiar face recognition are thought to be orientation dependen...
How do observers recognize faces despite dramatic image variations that arise from changes in illumi...
In two experiments we examined the ability of human observers to recognize faces from novel viewpoin...
We directly compared recognition for faces following 0° – 75° viewpoint rotation about the yaw, pitc...
Recognition of unfamiliar faces is susceptible to image differences caused by angular sizes subtende...
People are excellent at identifying faces familiar to them, even from very low quality images, but a...
The face inversion effect, evidence that humans possess a specialized system for face processing, an...
Object recognition based solely on spatial characteristics can only hope to provide limited toleranc...
Everyday life requires us to recognize faces under transient changes in pose, expression and lightin...
Although faces form a very homogenous stimulus class, adults are real experts in recognizing them. I...