Faces are perceived holistically, a phenomenon best illustrated when the processing of a face feature is affected by the other features. Here, the authors tested the hypothesis that the holistic perception of a face mainly relies on its low spatial frequencies. Holistic face perception was tested in two classical paradigms: the whole-part advantage (Experiment 1) and the composite face effect (Experiments 2-4). Holistic effects were equally large or larger for low-pass filtered faces as compared to full-spectrum faces and significantly larger than for high-pass filtered faces. The disproportionate composite effect found for low-pass filtered faces was not observed when holistic perception was disrupted by inversion (Experiment 3). Experimen...
Facial recognition has been a major scientific topic. What particular cognitive process is responsib...
Compelling evidence that faces are perceived holistically or configurally comes from the composite f...
People tend to perceive identical top halves (i.e. above the nose) of two face stimuli as being diff...
Background: Holistic processing is defined as the perceptual integration of facial features, and pla...
AbstractA large body of research supports the hypothesis that the human visual system does not proce...
A large body of research supports the hypothesis that the human visual system does not process a fac...
How does holistic/configural processing, a key property of face perception, vary with distance from ...
It is unknown whether spatial processing in the ventral (‘what’) stream contributes to high-level vi...
Face perception is thought to result from the dynamic interplay between holistic and featural modes ...
The aim of this article is to reinterpret the results obtained from the research analyzing the role ...
Holistic face processing is often referred to as the inability to selectively attend to part of face...
AbstractPrior work using a matching task between images that were complementary in spatial frequency...
One distinctive feature of processing faces, as compared to other categories, is thought to be the l...
People tend to perceive identical top halves (i.e. above the nose) of two face stimuli as being diff...
© 2016 American Psychological Association. Although many researchers agree that faces are processed...
Facial recognition has been a major scientific topic. What particular cognitive process is responsib...
Compelling evidence that faces are perceived holistically or configurally comes from the composite f...
People tend to perceive identical top halves (i.e. above the nose) of two face stimuli as being diff...
Background: Holistic processing is defined as the perceptual integration of facial features, and pla...
AbstractA large body of research supports the hypothesis that the human visual system does not proce...
A large body of research supports the hypothesis that the human visual system does not process a fac...
How does holistic/configural processing, a key property of face perception, vary with distance from ...
It is unknown whether spatial processing in the ventral (‘what’) stream contributes to high-level vi...
Face perception is thought to result from the dynamic interplay between holistic and featural modes ...
The aim of this article is to reinterpret the results obtained from the research analyzing the role ...
Holistic face processing is often referred to as the inability to selectively attend to part of face...
AbstractPrior work using a matching task between images that were complementary in spatial frequency...
One distinctive feature of processing faces, as compared to other categories, is thought to be the l...
People tend to perceive identical top halves (i.e. above the nose) of two face stimuli as being diff...
© 2016 American Psychological Association. Although many researchers agree that faces are processed...
Facial recognition has been a major scientific topic. What particular cognitive process is responsib...
Compelling evidence that faces are perceived holistically or configurally comes from the composite f...
People tend to perceive identical top halves (i.e. above the nose) of two face stimuli as being diff...