The disproportionate effect of vertical inversion on the processing of faces has often been interpreted as indicating differences in perceptive strategies between upright and inverted faces. If this is true, then the mathematical relation between the performance and the angular deviation would not be a linear function. Thirty subjects processed faces shown under 10 angular deviations from upright (0 deg) to upside-down (180 deg) in steps of 20 degrees, in a random design. Three cognitive levels (a between-subject factor) were tested, namely, gender classification of unfamiliar faces, familiarity decision on famous vs. unknown faces, and semantic decision (occupation) on famous faces, with 480 items per subject and task. We found no sign of ...
Presenting a face stimulus upside-down generally causes a larger deficit in perceiving metric distan...
The mechanisms held responsible for familiar face recognition are thought to be orientation dependen...
Numerous studies have reported impairments in perception and recognition, and, particularly, in part...
AbstractHumans are remarkably adept at recognizing objects across a wide range of views. A notable e...
Research suggests that inverted faces are harder to recognise than upright faces because of a disrup...
Recent work has demonstrated that facial familiarity can moderate the influence of inversion when co...
AbstractWhen faces are turned upside-down, many aspects of face processing are severely disrupted. H...
When faces are turned upside-down, many aspects of face processing are severely disrupted. Here we r...
AbstractFace inversion effects are used as evidence that faces are processed differently from object...
It has often been argued that the processing of faces is 'special' relative to the processing of oth...
UnrestrictedInverted faces are recognized more slowly and less accurately than upright faces (Yin, 1...
Upside-down inversion disrupts the processing of spatial relations between the features of a face, w...
Inversion has a disproportionate disruptive effect on the recognition of faces. This may be due to t...
Human observers are experts at face recognition, yet a simple 180 degrees rotation of a face photogr...
Inversion has been shown to disrupt face recognition, but relatively few studies have looked at the ...
Presenting a face stimulus upside-down generally causes a larger deficit in perceiving metric distan...
The mechanisms held responsible for familiar face recognition are thought to be orientation dependen...
Numerous studies have reported impairments in perception and recognition, and, particularly, in part...
AbstractHumans are remarkably adept at recognizing objects across a wide range of views. A notable e...
Research suggests that inverted faces are harder to recognise than upright faces because of a disrup...
Recent work has demonstrated that facial familiarity can moderate the influence of inversion when co...
AbstractWhen faces are turned upside-down, many aspects of face processing are severely disrupted. H...
When faces are turned upside-down, many aspects of face processing are severely disrupted. Here we r...
AbstractFace inversion effects are used as evidence that faces are processed differently from object...
It has often been argued that the processing of faces is 'special' relative to the processing of oth...
UnrestrictedInverted faces are recognized more slowly and less accurately than upright faces (Yin, 1...
Upside-down inversion disrupts the processing of spatial relations between the features of a face, w...
Inversion has a disproportionate disruptive effect on the recognition of faces. This may be due to t...
Human observers are experts at face recognition, yet a simple 180 degrees rotation of a face photogr...
Inversion has been shown to disrupt face recognition, but relatively few studies have looked at the ...
Presenting a face stimulus upside-down generally causes a larger deficit in perceiving metric distan...
The mechanisms held responsible for familiar face recognition are thought to be orientation dependen...
Numerous studies have reported impairments in perception and recognition, and, particularly, in part...