The worldwide fascination of da Vinci’s Mona Lisa has been dedicated to the emotional ambiguity of her face expression. In the present study we manipulated Mona Lisa’s mouth curvature as one potential source of ambiguity and studied how a range of happier and sadder face variants influences perception. In two experimental conditions we presented different stimulus ranges with different step sizes between stimuli along the happy-sad axis of emotional face expressions. Stimuli were presented in random order and participants indicated the perceived emotional face expression (first task) and the confidence of their response (second task). The probability of responding ‘happy’ to the original Mona Lisa was close to 100%. Furthermore, in both con...
AbstractA portrait of uncertain origin recently came to light which, after extensive research and ex...
A portrait of uncertain origin recently came to light which, after extensive research and examinatio...
Introduction: Facial expressions can elicit simulation in onlookers, and can thus trigger the subje...
AbstractTo study the ability of humans to read subtle changes in facial expression, we applied rever...
We present results from two experiments aimed at studying the direction of Mona Lisa’s gaze and its ...
The Mona Lisa is the most-visited, most written about and most parodied work of art in the world. H...
The Mona Lisa portrait, by Leonardo da Vinci, is one of the most famous paintings in the world. Over...
Da Vinci’s Mona Lisa is often celebrated for her enigmatic expression, somewhere in between happy an...
AIM:The present study utilizes perceptual hysteresis effects to compare the ambiguity of Mona Lisa's...
What gives Mona Lisas smile such a mysterious quality? Livingstone (2000) has suggested that the por...
This paper discusses how the 'Uncatchable Smile' illusion in Leonardo da Vinci's La Bella Principess...
What gives Mona Lisas smile such a mysterious quality? Livingstone (2000) has suggested that the por...
The classification image (CI) technique has been used to derive templates for judgements of facial e...
A portrait of uncertain origin recently came to light which, after extensive research and examinatio...
AbstractWe used a happy/sad classification task and a psychophysical model to study the tuning prope...
AbstractA portrait of uncertain origin recently came to light which, after extensive research and ex...
A portrait of uncertain origin recently came to light which, after extensive research and examinatio...
Introduction: Facial expressions can elicit simulation in onlookers, and can thus trigger the subje...
AbstractTo study the ability of humans to read subtle changes in facial expression, we applied rever...
We present results from two experiments aimed at studying the direction of Mona Lisa’s gaze and its ...
The Mona Lisa is the most-visited, most written about and most parodied work of art in the world. H...
The Mona Lisa portrait, by Leonardo da Vinci, is one of the most famous paintings in the world. Over...
Da Vinci’s Mona Lisa is often celebrated for her enigmatic expression, somewhere in between happy an...
AIM:The present study utilizes perceptual hysteresis effects to compare the ambiguity of Mona Lisa's...
What gives Mona Lisas smile such a mysterious quality? Livingstone (2000) has suggested that the por...
This paper discusses how the 'Uncatchable Smile' illusion in Leonardo da Vinci's La Bella Principess...
What gives Mona Lisas smile such a mysterious quality? Livingstone (2000) has suggested that the por...
The classification image (CI) technique has been used to derive templates for judgements of facial e...
A portrait of uncertain origin recently came to light which, after extensive research and examinatio...
AbstractWe used a happy/sad classification task and a psychophysical model to study the tuning prope...
AbstractA portrait of uncertain origin recently came to light which, after extensive research and ex...
A portrait of uncertain origin recently came to light which, after extensive research and examinatio...
Introduction: Facial expressions can elicit simulation in onlookers, and can thus trigger the subje...