Hills, Ross, and Lewis (2011) introduced the concept that the face-inversion effect may, in part, be carried by the first feature attended to, since the first feature fixated upon is different for upright and inverted faces. An eye-tracking study that directly assesses this hypothesis by using fixation crosses to guide attention to the eye or mouth region of the to-be-presented upright and inverted faces was devised. Recognition was better when the fixation cross appeared at the eye region than at the mouth region. The face-inversion effect was smaller when the eyes were cued than when the mouth was cued or when there was no cueing. The eye-tracking measures confirmed that the fixation crosses attracted the first fixation but did not affect...
AbstractHumans are remarkably adept at recognizing objects across a wide range of views. A notable e...
When faces are turned upside-down they are much more difficult to recognize than other objects. This...
When faces are turned upside-down they are much more difficult to recognize than other objects. This...
Hills, Ross, and Lewis (2011) introduced the concept that the face-inversion effect may, in part, be...
Hills, Ross, and Lewis (2011) introduced the concept that the face-inversion effect may, in part, be...
Hills, Ross, and Lewis (2011) introduced the concept that the face-inversion effect may, in part, be...
Inversion disproportionately impairs recognition of face stimuli compared to non-face stimuli arguab...
Inversion disproportionately impairs recognition of face stimuli compared to non-face stimuli arguab...
Inversion disproportionately impairs recognition of face stimuli compared to non-face stimuli arguab...
Face recognition is essential in everyday human life, and all faces are encountered in different pos...
Fixation patterns are thought to reflect cognitive processing and, thus, index the most informative ...
Faces we encounter in our daily lives are presented to us in several different views, yet most res...
Faces we encounter in our daily lives are presented to us in several different views, yet most res...
Human observers are experts at face recognition, yet a simple 180 degrees rotation of a face photogr...
When faces are turned upside-down they are much more difficult to recognize than other objects. This...
AbstractHumans are remarkably adept at recognizing objects across a wide range of views. A notable e...
When faces are turned upside-down they are much more difficult to recognize than other objects. This...
When faces are turned upside-down they are much more difficult to recognize than other objects. This...
Hills, Ross, and Lewis (2011) introduced the concept that the face-inversion effect may, in part, be...
Hills, Ross, and Lewis (2011) introduced the concept that the face-inversion effect may, in part, be...
Hills, Ross, and Lewis (2011) introduced the concept that the face-inversion effect may, in part, be...
Inversion disproportionately impairs recognition of face stimuli compared to non-face stimuli arguab...
Inversion disproportionately impairs recognition of face stimuli compared to non-face stimuli arguab...
Inversion disproportionately impairs recognition of face stimuli compared to non-face stimuli arguab...
Face recognition is essential in everyday human life, and all faces are encountered in different pos...
Fixation patterns are thought to reflect cognitive processing and, thus, index the most informative ...
Faces we encounter in our daily lives are presented to us in several different views, yet most res...
Faces we encounter in our daily lives are presented to us in several different views, yet most res...
Human observers are experts at face recognition, yet a simple 180 degrees rotation of a face photogr...
When faces are turned upside-down they are much more difficult to recognize than other objects. This...
AbstractHumans are remarkably adept at recognizing objects across a wide range of views. A notable e...
When faces are turned upside-down they are much more difficult to recognize than other objects. This...
When faces are turned upside-down they are much more difficult to recognize than other objects. This...