Despite extensive research on face perception, few studies have investigated individuals' knowledge about the physical features of their own face. In this study, 50 participants indicated the location of key features of their own face, relative to an anchor point corresponding to the tip of the nose, and the results were compared to the true location of the same individual's features from a standardised photograph. Horizontal and vertical errors were analysed separately. An overall bias to underestimate vertical distances revealed a distorted face representation, with reduced face height. Factor analyses were used to identify separable subconfigurations of facial features with correlated localisation errors. Independent representations of u...
Photographs are often used to establish the identity of an individual or to verify that they are who...
According to an influential view, based on studies of development and of the face inversion effect, ...
Psychological studies of face recognition have typically ignored within-person variation in appearan...
Despite extensive research on face perception, few studies have investigated individuals ’ knowledge...
Although mirrors, photographs and proprioceptive information are widely used for feedback about our ...
Face recognition has been the focus of multiple studies, but little is still known on how we represe...
A face contains crucial information for identification; moreover, face recognition is superior to ot...
Self-face perception plays an important role in self-consciousness and personal identity as well as ...
We live in an age of ‘selfies.’ Yet, how we look at our own faces has seldom been systematically inv...
People are good at recognising faces, particularly familiar faces. However, little is known about ho...
Face recognition is superior to object recognition, but inversion disproportionately impairs face re...
Recent research has shown that proprioception relies on distorted representations of body size and s...
We report here an unexpectedly robust ability of healthy human individuals (n = 40) to recognize ext...
It is widely accepted that face perception relies on holistic processing. However, this holistic adv...
Self-face recognition (SFR) has been studied using morphed images of an individual’s face with anoth...
Photographs are often used to establish the identity of an individual or to verify that they are who...
According to an influential view, based on studies of development and of the face inversion effect, ...
Psychological studies of face recognition have typically ignored within-person variation in appearan...
Despite extensive research on face perception, few studies have investigated individuals ’ knowledge...
Although mirrors, photographs and proprioceptive information are widely used for feedback about our ...
Face recognition has been the focus of multiple studies, but little is still known on how we represe...
A face contains crucial information for identification; moreover, face recognition is superior to ot...
Self-face perception plays an important role in self-consciousness and personal identity as well as ...
We live in an age of ‘selfies.’ Yet, how we look at our own faces has seldom been systematically inv...
People are good at recognising faces, particularly familiar faces. However, little is known about ho...
Face recognition is superior to object recognition, but inversion disproportionately impairs face re...
Recent research has shown that proprioception relies on distorted representations of body size and s...
We report here an unexpectedly robust ability of healthy human individuals (n = 40) to recognize ext...
It is widely accepted that face perception relies on holistic processing. However, this holistic adv...
Self-face recognition (SFR) has been studied using morphed images of an individual’s face with anoth...
Photographs are often used to establish the identity of an individual or to verify that they are who...
According to an influential view, based on studies of development and of the face inversion effect, ...
Psychological studies of face recognition have typically ignored within-person variation in appearan...