AbstractHumans have an impressive ability to discriminate between faces despite their similarity as visual patterns [1, 2]. This expertise relies on configural coding of spatial relations between face features and/or holistic coding of overall facial structure [2–6]. These expert face-coding mechanisms appear to be engaged most effectively by upright faces, with inverted faces engaging primarily feature-coding mechanisms [2, 7–11]. We show that opposite figural aftereffects can be induced simultaneously for upright and inverted faces, demonstrating that distinct neural populations code upright and inverted faces. This result also suggests that expert (upright) face-coding mechanisms can be selectively adapted. These aftereffects occur for j...
AbstractWhen faces are turned upside-down, many aspects of face processing are severely disrupted. H...
AbstractPrevious research suggests that observers use information near the eyes and eyebrows to iden...
Recent work demonstrates that human face identification is most efficient when based on horizontal, ...
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...
AbstractOur ability to recognize faces despite their similarity as visual patterns depends on high-l...
AbstractRecent studies suggest that adaptation effects for face shape and gender transfer from uprig...
AbstractHumans are remarkably adept at recognizing objects across a wide range of views. A notable e...
AbstractVisual aftereffects have been found for a wide variety of stimuli, ranging from oriented lin...
AbstractAfter prolonged exposure to a female face, faces that had previously seemed androgynous are ...
The viewpoint aftereffect is a perceptual illusion that, after adapting to an object/face viewed fro...
Here we examine whether our impressive ability to perceive upright faces arises from evolved orienta...
We can detect faces more rapidly and efficiently compared to non-face object categories (Bell et al....
Face aftereffects for upright faces have been widely assumed to derive from face space and to provid...
While it is well established that different neural populations code different face views, behavioura...
AbstractWhen faces are turned upside-down, many aspects of face processing are severely disrupted. H...
AbstractPrevious research suggests that observers use information near the eyes and eyebrows to iden...
Recent work demonstrates that human face identification is most efficient when based on horizontal, ...
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...
AbstractOur ability to recognize faces despite their similarity as visual patterns depends on high-l...
AbstractRecent studies suggest that adaptation effects for face shape and gender transfer from uprig...
AbstractHumans are remarkably adept at recognizing objects across a wide range of views. A notable e...
AbstractVisual aftereffects have been found for a wide variety of stimuli, ranging from oriented lin...
AbstractAfter prolonged exposure to a female face, faces that had previously seemed androgynous are ...
The viewpoint aftereffect is a perceptual illusion that, after adapting to an object/face viewed fro...
Here we examine whether our impressive ability to perceive upright faces arises from evolved orienta...
We can detect faces more rapidly and efficiently compared to non-face object categories (Bell et al....
Face aftereffects for upright faces have been widely assumed to derive from face space and to provid...
While it is well established that different neural populations code different face views, behavioura...
AbstractWhen faces are turned upside-down, many aspects of face processing are severely disrupted. H...
AbstractPrevious research suggests that observers use information near the eyes and eyebrows to iden...
Recent work demonstrates that human face identification is most efficient when based on horizontal, ...