When people recognise faces, they normally move their eyes so that their first fixation is in the optimal location for efficient perceptual processing. This location is found just below the centre-point between the eyes. This type of attentional bias could be partly innate, but also an inevitable developmental process that aids our ability to recognise faces. We investigated whether a group of people with developmental prosopagnosia would also demonstrate neurotypical first fixation locations when recognising faces during an eye tracking task. We found evidence that adults with prosopagnosia had atypically heterogeneous first fixations in comparison to controls. However, differences were limited to the vertical, but not horizontal, plane of...
Objective: To contribute to the limited body of eye movement (EM) studies of children and family mem...
Face recognition is a fundamental cognitive function that is essential for social interaction – yet ...
Prosopagnosia is a selective deficit in facial identification which can be either acquired, (e.g., a...
When people recognise faces, they normally move their eyes so that their first fixation is in the op...
Developmental prosopagnosia (DP) is a cognitive condition characterized by a severe deficit in face ...
Despite extensive investigation, the causes and nature of developmental prosopagnosia (DP)-a severe ...
Developmental prosopagnosia (DP) is a cognitive condition characterized by a severe deficit in face ...
Developmental prosopagnosia (DP) is a cognitive condition characterized by a severe deficit in face ...
Selective impairment of face recognition following brain damage, as in acquired prosopagnosia, may c...
Selective impairment of face recognition following brain damage, as in acquired prosopagnosia, may c...
Selective impairment of face recognition following brain damage, as in acquired prosopagnosia, may c...
The scanpaths of healthy subjects show biases towards the upper face, the eyes and the center of the...
The scanpaths of healthy subjects show biases towards the upper face, the eyes and the center of the...
There is abundant evidence that face recognition, in comparison to the recognition of other objects,...
Background: Prosopagnosia is a selective deficit in facial identification which can be either acquir...
Objective: To contribute to the limited body of eye movement (EM) studies of children and family mem...
Face recognition is a fundamental cognitive function that is essential for social interaction – yet ...
Prosopagnosia is a selective deficit in facial identification which can be either acquired, (e.g., a...
When people recognise faces, they normally move their eyes so that their first fixation is in the op...
Developmental prosopagnosia (DP) is a cognitive condition characterized by a severe deficit in face ...
Despite extensive investigation, the causes and nature of developmental prosopagnosia (DP)-a severe ...
Developmental prosopagnosia (DP) is a cognitive condition characterized by a severe deficit in face ...
Developmental prosopagnosia (DP) is a cognitive condition characterized by a severe deficit in face ...
Selective impairment of face recognition following brain damage, as in acquired prosopagnosia, may c...
Selective impairment of face recognition following brain damage, as in acquired prosopagnosia, may c...
Selective impairment of face recognition following brain damage, as in acquired prosopagnosia, may c...
The scanpaths of healthy subjects show biases towards the upper face, the eyes and the center of the...
The scanpaths of healthy subjects show biases towards the upper face, the eyes and the center of the...
There is abundant evidence that face recognition, in comparison to the recognition of other objects,...
Background: Prosopagnosia is a selective deficit in facial identification which can be either acquir...
Objective: To contribute to the limited body of eye movement (EM) studies of children and family mem...
Face recognition is a fundamental cognitive function that is essential for social interaction – yet ...
Prosopagnosia is a selective deficit in facial identification which can be either acquired, (e.g., a...