Face recognition is an essential skill that in many species is associated with apparently specialized neurological and cognitive mechanisms. This chapter summarizes some of the behavioral and neuroscientific research on laterality effects in face perception, with a focus on face identity processing in humans and animals.This work was supported by The Icelandic Research Fund (Grant No. 174013-051) and the University of Iceland Research Fund
peer reviewedFace processing is a function that is highly lateralized in humans, as supported by ori...
Prior research has found that the left side of the face is emotionally more expressive than the righ...
When human subjects view photographs of faces, their judgments of identity, gender, emotion, age and...
Facial recognition has been a major scientific topic. What particular cognitive process is responsib...
Cerebral lateralization and associated motor behaviors were historically thought to be characteristi...
Two experiments tested for hemispheric specialization during subordinate and basic-level face recogn...
We investigated the lateralized processing of featural and configural information in face recognitio...
Mental rotation of body parts is influenced by specific sensory-motor information, and may be perfor...
While functional lateralization of the human brain has been a widely studied topic in the past decad...
This book is a collection of papers written by leaders in the field of lateralized brain function an...
Lateralization of brain and behavior in both humans and non-human animals is a topic that has fascin...
Bruyer and Dussart (1985) have recently shown that the "race effect", i.e. the difficulty in recogni...
This edited book brings together research reports on the asymmetry of brain function in various spec...
This chapter will review neuropsychological studies of face processing defects. Recent research in t...
We rely heavily on faces during social interactions. Humans possess the ability to recognise thousan...
peer reviewedFace processing is a function that is highly lateralized in humans, as supported by ori...
Prior research has found that the left side of the face is emotionally more expressive than the righ...
When human subjects view photographs of faces, their judgments of identity, gender, emotion, age and...
Facial recognition has been a major scientific topic. What particular cognitive process is responsib...
Cerebral lateralization and associated motor behaviors were historically thought to be characteristi...
Two experiments tested for hemispheric specialization during subordinate and basic-level face recogn...
We investigated the lateralized processing of featural and configural information in face recognitio...
Mental rotation of body parts is influenced by specific sensory-motor information, and may be perfor...
While functional lateralization of the human brain has been a widely studied topic in the past decad...
This book is a collection of papers written by leaders in the field of lateralized brain function an...
Lateralization of brain and behavior in both humans and non-human animals is a topic that has fascin...
Bruyer and Dussart (1985) have recently shown that the "race effect", i.e. the difficulty in recogni...
This edited book brings together research reports on the asymmetry of brain function in various spec...
This chapter will review neuropsychological studies of face processing defects. Recent research in t...
We rely heavily on faces during social interactions. Humans possess the ability to recognise thousan...
peer reviewedFace processing is a function that is highly lateralized in humans, as supported by ori...
Prior research has found that the left side of the face is emotionally more expressive than the righ...
When human subjects view photographs of faces, their judgments of identity, gender, emotion, age and...