Here we examine whether our impressive ability to perceive upright faces arises from evolved orientation-specific mechanisms, our extensive experience with upright faces, or both factors. To do so, we tested Claudio, a man with a congenital joint disorder causing his head to be rotated back so that it is positioned between his shoulder blades. As a result, Claudio has seen more faces reversed in orientation to his own face than matched to it. Controls exhibited large inversion effects on all tasks, but Claudio performed similarly with upright and inverted faces in both detection and identity-matching tasks, indicating these abilities are the product of evolved mechanisms and experience. In contrast, he showed clear upright superiority when ...
Human observers are experts at face recognition, yet a simple 180 degrees rotation of a face photogr...
AbstractWe trained subjects to identify either upright or inverted faces in a 10AFC task and measure...
AbstractWhen faces are turned upside-down, many aspects of face processing are severely disrupted. H...
Here we examine whether our impressive ability to perceive upright faces arises from evolved orienta...
The poorer recognition performance for inverted as compared to upright faces is one of the most well...
AbstractHumans are remarkably adept at recognizing objects across a wide range of views. A notable e...
The mechanisms held responsible for familiar face recognition are thought to be orientation dependen...
AbstractHumans have an impressive ability to discriminate between faces despite their similarity as ...
The mechanisms held responsible for familiar face recognition are thought to be orientation dependen...
Numerous studies have reported impairments in perception and recognition, and, particularly, in part...
Face recognition in young human adults preferentially relies on the processing of horizontally-orien...
It is considerably harder to generalize identity across different pictures of unfamiliar faces, comp...
UnrestrictedInverted faces are recognized more slowly and less accurately than upright faces (Yin, 1...
AbstractOur ability to recognize faces despite their similarity as visual patterns depends on high-l...
Inversion has a disproportionate disruptive effect on the recognition of faces. This may be due to t...
Human observers are experts at face recognition, yet a simple 180 degrees rotation of a face photogr...
AbstractWe trained subjects to identify either upright or inverted faces in a 10AFC task and measure...
AbstractWhen faces are turned upside-down, many aspects of face processing are severely disrupted. H...
Here we examine whether our impressive ability to perceive upright faces arises from evolved orienta...
The poorer recognition performance for inverted as compared to upright faces is one of the most well...
AbstractHumans are remarkably adept at recognizing objects across a wide range of views. A notable e...
The mechanisms held responsible for familiar face recognition are thought to be orientation dependen...
AbstractHumans have an impressive ability to discriminate between faces despite their similarity as ...
The mechanisms held responsible for familiar face recognition are thought to be orientation dependen...
Numerous studies have reported impairments in perception and recognition, and, particularly, in part...
Face recognition in young human adults preferentially relies on the processing of horizontally-orien...
It is considerably harder to generalize identity across different pictures of unfamiliar faces, comp...
UnrestrictedInverted faces are recognized more slowly and less accurately than upright faces (Yin, 1...
AbstractOur ability to recognize faces despite their similarity as visual patterns depends on high-l...
Inversion has a disproportionate disruptive effect on the recognition of faces. This may be due to t...
Human observers are experts at face recognition, yet a simple 180 degrees rotation of a face photogr...
AbstractWe trained subjects to identify either upright or inverted faces in a 10AFC task and measure...
AbstractWhen faces are turned upside-down, many aspects of face processing are severely disrupted. H...