Identity sorting tasks, in which participants sort multiple naturally varying stimuli of usually two identities into perceived identities, have recently gained popularity in voice and face processing research. In both modalities, participants who are unfamiliar with the identities tend to perceive multiple stimuli of the same identity as different people and thus fail to "tell people together." These similarities across modalities suggest that modality-general mechanisms may underpin sorting behaviour. In this study, participants completed a voice sorting and a face sorting task. Taking an individual differences approach, we asked whether participants' performance on voice and face sorting of unfamiliar identities is correlated. Participant...
Face and voice are two preeminent physical cues describing a person. In unimodal face studies, faces...
The human voice is a highly flexible instrument for self-expression, yet voice identity perception ...
Previous research suggests that familiarity with a voice can afford benefits for voice and speech pe...
Identity sorting tasks, in which participants sort multiple naturally varying stimuli of usually two...
Unimodal and cross-modal information provided by faces and voices contribute to identity percepts. T...
We investigated the effects of two types of task instructions on performance on a voice sorting task...
The present article reports on one experiment designed to examine the importance of familiarity when...
The human voice is a highly flexible instrument for self-expression, yet voice identity perception i...
Familiar and unfamiliar voice perception are often understood as being distinct from each other. For...
Our voices sound different depending on the context (laughing vs. talking to a child vs. giving a sp...
Our voices sound different depending on the context (laughing vs. talking to a child vs. giving a sp...
We investigated the relationships between individual differences in different aspects of face-identi...
Voices and static faces can be matched for identity above chance level. No previous face- voice matc...
Deciding whether two different face photographs or voice samples are from the same person represent ...
AbstractSeveral studies have provided evidence in favour of a norm-based representation of faces in ...
Face and voice are two preeminent physical cues describing a person. In unimodal face studies, faces...
The human voice is a highly flexible instrument for self-expression, yet voice identity perception ...
Previous research suggests that familiarity with a voice can afford benefits for voice and speech pe...
Identity sorting tasks, in which participants sort multiple naturally varying stimuli of usually two...
Unimodal and cross-modal information provided by faces and voices contribute to identity percepts. T...
We investigated the effects of two types of task instructions on performance on a voice sorting task...
The present article reports on one experiment designed to examine the importance of familiarity when...
The human voice is a highly flexible instrument for self-expression, yet voice identity perception i...
Familiar and unfamiliar voice perception are often understood as being distinct from each other. For...
Our voices sound different depending on the context (laughing vs. talking to a child vs. giving a sp...
Our voices sound different depending on the context (laughing vs. talking to a child vs. giving a sp...
We investigated the relationships between individual differences in different aspects of face-identi...
Voices and static faces can be matched for identity above chance level. No previous face- voice matc...
Deciding whether two different face photographs or voice samples are from the same person represent ...
AbstractSeveral studies have provided evidence in favour of a norm-based representation of faces in ...
Face and voice are two preeminent physical cues describing a person. In unimodal face studies, faces...
The human voice is a highly flexible instrument for self-expression, yet voice identity perception ...
Previous research suggests that familiarity with a voice can afford benefits for voice and speech pe...