AbstractCategorical perception (CP) is a fundamental cognitive process that enables us to sort similar objects in the world into meaningful categories with clear boundaries between them. CP has been found for high-level stimuli like human faces, more precisely, for the perception of face identity, expression and ethnicity. For sex however, which represents another important and biologically relevant dimension of human faces, results have been equivocal so far. Here, we reinvestigate CP for sex using newly created face stimuli to control two factors that to our opinion might have influenced the results in earlier studies. Our new stimuli are (a) derived from single face identities, so that changes of sex are not confounded with changes of id...
In previous studies, we investigated whether male and female faces are perceived as distinct categor...
The categorization of dominant facial features, such as sex, is a highly relevant function for socia...
Faces are easily categorized as male or female. But is this categorization done at the perceptual le...
AbstractCategorical perception (CP) is a fundamental cognitive process that enables us to sort simil...
Categorical perception (CP) is a fundamental cognitive process that enables us to sort similar objec...
The cognitive process of categorizing perceptually similar stimuli into qualitatively different cate...
Categorical perception (CP) has been demonstrated for face identity and facial expression, while con...
The perception of face identity, race and also facial expressions has been shown to be categorical. ...
We investigated whether male and female faces are discrete categories at the perceptual level and wh...
We investigated whether male and female faces are discrete categories at the perceptual level. We cr...
Background: Our visual system uses a sophisticated mechanism called categorical perception to discri...
According to a classical functional architecture of face processing (Bruce & Young, 1986), sex p...
We could find no evidence for categorical perception of face gender using unfamiliar human faces (I ...
According to a classical functional architecture of face processing (Bruce & Young, 1986), sex proce...
Abstract Our faces display socially important sex and identity information. How perceptually indepen...
In previous studies, we investigated whether male and female faces are perceived as distinct categor...
The categorization of dominant facial features, such as sex, is a highly relevant function for socia...
Faces are easily categorized as male or female. But is this categorization done at the perceptual le...
AbstractCategorical perception (CP) is a fundamental cognitive process that enables us to sort simil...
Categorical perception (CP) is a fundamental cognitive process that enables us to sort similar objec...
The cognitive process of categorizing perceptually similar stimuli into qualitatively different cate...
Categorical perception (CP) has been demonstrated for face identity and facial expression, while con...
The perception of face identity, race and also facial expressions has been shown to be categorical. ...
We investigated whether male and female faces are discrete categories at the perceptual level and wh...
We investigated whether male and female faces are discrete categories at the perceptual level. We cr...
Background: Our visual system uses a sophisticated mechanism called categorical perception to discri...
According to a classical functional architecture of face processing (Bruce & Young, 1986), sex p...
We could find no evidence for categorical perception of face gender using unfamiliar human faces (I ...
According to a classical functional architecture of face processing (Bruce & Young, 1986), sex proce...
Abstract Our faces display socially important sex and identity information. How perceptually indepen...
In previous studies, we investigated whether male and female faces are perceived as distinct categor...
The categorization of dominant facial features, such as sex, is a highly relevant function for socia...
Faces are easily categorized as male or female. But is this categorization done at the perceptual le...