AbstractOur ability to recognize faces despite their similarity as visual patterns depends on high-level face-coding mechanisms that are strongly tuned to upright faces. If face aftereffects reflect adaptation of these mechanisms, as widely assumed, then they should be sensitive to face orientation. Previous studies have not supported this hypothesis, but have generally used a figural aftereffect paradigm, which may not optimally engage expert face-coding mechanisms. Here, we used an identity aftereffect paradigm, which requires identification of target faces, to provide a stronger test of the hypothesis. We measured identity aftereffects for upright and inverted faces, with and without eliminating low-level retinotopic adaptation. Baseline...
AbstractAdaptation is a fundamental property of perceptual processing. In low-level vision, it can c...
AbstractHumans are remarkably adept at recognizing objects across a wide range of views. A notable e...
AbstractIdentification of a face is facilitated by adapting to its computationally opposite identity...
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 ...
AbstractRecent studies suggest that adaptation effects for face shape and gender transfer from uprig...
Recent work demonstrates that human face identification is most efficient when based on horizontal, ...
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...
AbstractProlonged exposure to upright and inverted female and male faces produces opposite effects o...
Orientation selectivity is a fundamental property of primary visual encoding. High-level processing ...
Orientation selectivity is a fundamental property of primary visual encoding. High-level processing ...
Human observers are more sensitive to faces than any other visual stimulus. For decades, researchers...
The mechanisms held responsible for familiar face recognition are thought to be orientation dependen...
The mechanisms held responsible for familiar face recognition are thought to be orientation dependen...
AbstractAdaptation is a fundamental property of perceptual processing. In low-level vision, it can c...
AbstractHumans are remarkably adept at recognizing objects across a wide range of views. A notable e...
AbstractIdentification of a face is facilitated by adapting to its computationally opposite identity...
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 ...
AbstractRecent studies suggest that adaptation effects for face shape and gender transfer from uprig...
Recent work demonstrates that human face identification is most efficient when based on horizontal, ...
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...
AbstractProlonged exposure to upright and inverted female and male faces produces opposite effects o...
Orientation selectivity is a fundamental property of primary visual encoding. High-level processing ...
Orientation selectivity is a fundamental property of primary visual encoding. High-level processing ...
Human observers are more sensitive to faces than any other visual stimulus. For decades, researchers...
The mechanisms held responsible for familiar face recognition are thought to be orientation dependen...
The mechanisms held responsible for familiar face recognition are thought to be orientation dependen...
AbstractAdaptation is a fundamental property of perceptual processing. In low-level vision, it can c...
AbstractHumans are remarkably adept at recognizing objects across a wide range of views. A notable e...
AbstractIdentification of a face is facilitated by adapting to its computationally opposite identity...