The ability to detect faces in the environment is of utmost ecological importance for human social adaptation. While face categorization is efficient, fast and robust to sensory degradation, it is massively impaired when the facial stimulus does not match the natural contrast statistics of this visual category, i.e., the typically experienced ordered alternation of relatively darker and lighter regions of the face. To clarify this phenomenon, we characterized the contribution of natural contrast statistics to face categorization. Specifically, 31 human adults viewed various natural images of non-face categories at a rate of 12 Hz, with highly variable images of faces occurring every eight stimuli (1.5 Hz). As in previous studies, neural res...
International audiencePrevious magnetoencephalography/electroencephalography (M/EEG) studies have su...
Abstract published in Journal of Vision, 19(10):181c, September 2019International audienceThe proces...
How early does the brain decode object categories? Addressing this question is critical to constrain...
The ability to detect faces in the environment is of utmost ecological importance for human social a...
Abstract published in Perception 48(2S):79-80, September 2019International audienceHow contrast sens...
Visual categorization is integral for our interaction with the natural environment. In this process,...
peer reviewedPerceptual categorization occurs rapidly under natural viewing conditions. Yet, the neu...
Visual categorization is integral for our interaction with the natural environment. In this process,...
Color's contribution to rapid categorization of natural images is debated. We examine its effect on ...
Face perception is a critical social ability and identifying its neural correlates is important from...
Seeing a face in the real world provokes a host of automatic categorisations related to sex, emotion...
Color’s contribution to rapid categorization of natural images is debated. We examine its effect on...
International audienceThe human brain rapidly and automatically categorizes faces vs. other visual o...
peer reviewedAlthough humans discriminate natural images of faces from other categories at a single ...
International audienceEmotional expressions are quickly and automatically read from human faces unde...
International audiencePrevious magnetoencephalography/electroencephalography (M/EEG) studies have su...
Abstract published in Journal of Vision, 19(10):181c, September 2019International audienceThe proces...
How early does the brain decode object categories? Addressing this question is critical to constrain...
The ability to detect faces in the environment is of utmost ecological importance for human social a...
Abstract published in Perception 48(2S):79-80, September 2019International audienceHow contrast sens...
Visual categorization is integral for our interaction with the natural environment. In this process,...
peer reviewedPerceptual categorization occurs rapidly under natural viewing conditions. Yet, the neu...
Visual categorization is integral for our interaction with the natural environment. In this process,...
Color's contribution to rapid categorization of natural images is debated. We examine its effect on ...
Face perception is a critical social ability and identifying its neural correlates is important from...
Seeing a face in the real world provokes a host of automatic categorisations related to sex, emotion...
Color’s contribution to rapid categorization of natural images is debated. We examine its effect on...
International audienceThe human brain rapidly and automatically categorizes faces vs. other visual o...
peer reviewedAlthough humans discriminate natural images of faces from other categories at a single ...
International audienceEmotional expressions are quickly and automatically read from human faces unde...
International audiencePrevious magnetoencephalography/electroencephalography (M/EEG) studies have su...
Abstract published in Journal of Vision, 19(10):181c, September 2019International audienceThe proces...
How early does the brain decode object categories? Addressing this question is critical to constrain...