AbstractRecent studies suggest that adaptation effects for face shape and gender transfer from upright to inverted faces more than the reverse. We investigated whether a similar asymmetry occurred for face identity, using a recently developed adaptation method based on contrast-recognition thresholds. When adapting and test stimuli shared the same orientation, aftereffects were similar for upright and inverted faces. When orientation differed, there was significant transfer of aftereffects from upright adapting to inverted test faces, but none from inverted to upright faces. We show that asymmetric cross-orientation transfer of face aftereffects generalize across two distinct face adaptation paradigms: the previously used perceptual-bias me...
AbstractAfter prolonged exposure to a female face, faces that had previously seemed androgynous are ...
AbstractVisual adaptation results in aftereffects that exaggerate the difference between successivel...
Evidence that self-face recognition is dissociable from general face recognition has important impli...
AbstractRecent studies suggest that adaptation effects for face shape and gender transfer from uprig...
AbstractOur ability to recognize faces despite their similarity as visual patterns depends on high-l...
AbstractHumans have an impressive ability to discriminate between faces despite their similarity as ...
AbstractProlonged exposure to upright and inverted female and male faces produces opposite effects o...
The viewpoint aftereffect is a perceptual illusion that, after adapting to an object/face viewed fro...
An important question regarding face aftereffects is whether it is based on face-specific or lower-l...
An important question regarding face aftereffects is whether it is based on face-specific or lower-l...
none3noProlonged exposure to a stimulus results in a subsequent perceptual bias. This perceptual ada...
AbstractVisual aftereffects have been found for a wide variety of stimuli, ranging from oriented lin...
Numerous studies have reported impairments in perception and recognition, and, particularly, in part...
peer reviewedHuman faces look more similar to each other when they are presented upside-down, leadin...
AbstractHumans are remarkably adept at recognizing objects across a wide range of views. A notable e...
AbstractAfter prolonged exposure to a female face, faces that had previously seemed androgynous are ...
AbstractVisual adaptation results in aftereffects that exaggerate the difference between successivel...
Evidence that self-face recognition is dissociable from general face recognition has important impli...
AbstractRecent studies suggest that adaptation effects for face shape and gender transfer from uprig...
AbstractOur ability to recognize faces despite their similarity as visual patterns depends on high-l...
AbstractHumans have an impressive ability to discriminate between faces despite their similarity as ...
AbstractProlonged exposure to upright and inverted female and male faces produces opposite effects o...
The viewpoint aftereffect is a perceptual illusion that, after adapting to an object/face viewed fro...
An important question regarding face aftereffects is whether it is based on face-specific or lower-l...
An important question regarding face aftereffects is whether it is based on face-specific or lower-l...
none3noProlonged exposure to a stimulus results in a subsequent perceptual bias. This perceptual ada...
AbstractVisual aftereffects have been found for a wide variety of stimuli, ranging from oriented lin...
Numerous studies have reported impairments in perception and recognition, and, particularly, in part...
peer reviewedHuman faces look more similar to each other when they are presented upside-down, leadin...
AbstractHumans are remarkably adept at recognizing objects across a wide range of views. A notable e...
AbstractAfter prolonged exposure to a female face, faces that had previously seemed androgynous are ...
AbstractVisual adaptation results in aftereffects that exaggerate the difference between successivel...
Evidence that self-face recognition is dissociable from general face recognition has important impli...