Contains fulltext : 133506.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Using a composite-face paradigm, we show that social judgments from faces rely on holistic processing. Participants judged facial halves more positively when aligned with trustworthy than with untrustworthy halves, despite instructions to ignore the aligned parts (experiment 1). This effect was substantially reduced when the faces were inverted (experiments 2 and 3) and when the halves were misaligned (experiment 3). In all three experiments, judgments were affected to a larger extent by the to-be-attended than the to-be-ignored halves, suggesting that there is partial control of holistic processing. However, after rapid exposures to faces (33 to 100 ms), j...
People tend to perceive identical top halves (i.e. above the nose) of two face stimuli as being diff...
We examined whether temporal integration of face parts reflects holistic processing or response inte...
Prior research suggests that people process upright faces holistically as an independent image, but ...
Abstract Face perception is widely believed to involve integration of facial features into a holisti...
© 2016 American Psychological Association. Although many researchers agree that faces are processed...
We examined whether holistic processing, a hallmark of face perception, took place at an early stage...
Several sequential matching composite face paradigms are used to assess “holistic processing ” of fa...
Our visual system is remarkably good at extracting socially relevant information from faces (e.g., t...
What role do general-purpose, experience-sensitive perceptual mechanisms play in producing character...
People’s general expertise with faces leads them to quickly process them as wholes rather than as co...
AbstractA large body of research supports the hypothesis that the human visual system does not proce...
Traditional accounts of face perception emphasise the importance of the prototypical configuration o...
A large body of research supports the hypothesis that the human visual system does not process a fac...
People tend to perceive identical top halves (i.e. above the nose) of two face stimuli as being diff...
Holistic face processing is often referred to as the inability to selectively attend to part of face...
People tend to perceive identical top halves (i.e. above the nose) of two face stimuli as being diff...
We examined whether temporal integration of face parts reflects holistic processing or response inte...
Prior research suggests that people process upright faces holistically as an independent image, but ...
Abstract Face perception is widely believed to involve integration of facial features into a holisti...
© 2016 American Psychological Association. Although many researchers agree that faces are processed...
We examined whether holistic processing, a hallmark of face perception, took place at an early stage...
Several sequential matching composite face paradigms are used to assess “holistic processing ” of fa...
Our visual system is remarkably good at extracting socially relevant information from faces (e.g., t...
What role do general-purpose, experience-sensitive perceptual mechanisms play in producing character...
People’s general expertise with faces leads them to quickly process them as wholes rather than as co...
AbstractA large body of research supports the hypothesis that the human visual system does not proce...
Traditional accounts of face perception emphasise the importance of the prototypical configuration o...
A large body of research supports the hypothesis that the human visual system does not process a fac...
People tend to perceive identical top halves (i.e. above the nose) of two face stimuli as being diff...
Holistic face processing is often referred to as the inability to selectively attend to part of face...
People tend to perceive identical top halves (i.e. above the nose) of two face stimuli as being diff...
We examined whether temporal integration of face parts reflects holistic processing or response inte...
Prior research suggests that people process upright faces holistically as an independent image, but ...