Recognising other people in naturalistic settings relies on differentiating between individuals (“telling apart”), as well as generalising across within-person variability (“telling together”; Burton, 2013; Lavan, Burston, & Garrido, 2019; Lavan, Burton, et al., 2019). However, previous neuroscientific investigations of face and voice recognition have tended to measure identity-related responses and representations using tightly controlled stimuli, thus under sampling the naturalistic variability encountered in everyday life. In this study, we tested whether cortical regions previously implicated in processing faces and voices represent identities during naturalistic and task-free stimulation. Representational similarity analyses were condu...
Personally familiar faces are processed more robustly and efficiently than unfamiliar faces. The hum...
It has been proposed that faces are represented in the visual brain as points within a multi-dimensi...
open3siThis research was supported by the CompX Faculty Grant from the William H Neukom 1964 Institu...
Recognising other people in naturalistic settings relies on differentiating between individuals (“te...
This thesis was submitted for the award of Doctor of Philosopjy and was awarded by Brunel University...
Face-selective and voice-selective brain regions have been shown to represent face-identity and voic...
International audienceRecognizing familiar individuals is achieved by the brain by combining cues fr...
Recognising a person's identity often relies on face and body information, and is tolerant to change...
Recognizing the identity of other individuals across different sensory modalities is critical for su...
Processes evoked by seeing a personally familiar face encompass recognition of visual appearance and...
Recent theories on the neural correlates of face identification stressed the importance of the avail...
Personally familiar faces are processed more robustly and efficiently than unfamiliar faces. The hum...
Faces of different people elicit distinct functional MRI (fMRI) patterns in several face-selective b...
Multiples studies have investigated the role of familiarity, emotion and novelty in the detection an...
Neurons in the human medial temporal lobe (MTL) that are selective for the identity of specific peop...
Personally familiar faces are processed more robustly and efficiently than unfamiliar faces. The hum...
It has been proposed that faces are represented in the visual brain as points within a multi-dimensi...
open3siThis research was supported by the CompX Faculty Grant from the William H Neukom 1964 Institu...
Recognising other people in naturalistic settings relies on differentiating between individuals (“te...
This thesis was submitted for the award of Doctor of Philosopjy and was awarded by Brunel University...
Face-selective and voice-selective brain regions have been shown to represent face-identity and voic...
International audienceRecognizing familiar individuals is achieved by the brain by combining cues fr...
Recognising a person's identity often relies on face and body information, and is tolerant to change...
Recognizing the identity of other individuals across different sensory modalities is critical for su...
Processes evoked by seeing a personally familiar face encompass recognition of visual appearance and...
Recent theories on the neural correlates of face identification stressed the importance of the avail...
Personally familiar faces are processed more robustly and efficiently than unfamiliar faces. The hum...
Faces of different people elicit distinct functional MRI (fMRI) patterns in several face-selective b...
Multiples studies have investigated the role of familiarity, emotion and novelty in the detection an...
Neurons in the human medial temporal lobe (MTL) that are selective for the identity of specific peop...
Personally familiar faces are processed more robustly and efficiently than unfamiliar faces. The hum...
It has been proposed that faces are represented in the visual brain as points within a multi-dimensi...
open3siThis research was supported by the CompX Faculty Grant from the William H Neukom 1964 Institu...