Covert face recognition has previously been thought to produce only very short-lasting effects. In this study we demonstrate that manipulating subjects' attentional load affects explicit, but not implicit memory for faces, and that implicit effects can persist over much longer intervals than is normally reported. Subjects performed letter-string tasks of high vs. low perceptual load (Lavie, N. (1995). Perceptual load as a necessary condition for selective attention. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Perfomance. 21, 451–468.), while ignoring task-irrelevant celebrity faces. Memory for the faces was then assessed using (a) a surprise recognition test for the celebrities' names, and (b) repetition priming in a face famil...
The role of working memory in visual selective attention was investigated. Participants ignored dist...
Face aftereffects are widely studied on the assumption that they provide a useful tool for investiga...
Recent parallels between neurophysiological and neuroimaging findings suggest that repeated stimulus...
Covert face recognition has previously been thought to produce only very short-lasting effects. In t...
International audienceA common view in face recognition research holds that there is a stored repres...
People have particular difficulty ignoring distractors that depict faces. This phenomenon has been a...
The “distinctiveness effect ” in face memory holds that distinctive faces are recognized better than...
In daily life, facial recognition is necessary in our interactions with people, creating a peaked in...
Models of face processing suggest that recognizing a person should prime recognition of a consecutiv...
A particularly interesting and somewhat puzzling finding in the face-processing literature is that, ...
The present study used masked repetition priming to examine whether face representations can be acce...
International audienceA series of studies conducted over the past 20 years have explored the effects...
Covert face recognition in neurologically-intact participants was investigated using very brief stim...
This dissertation seeks to unite two major streams of cognitive research that have traditionally pro...
When we look around, our subjective impression is of a highly detailed visual representation, which ...
The role of working memory in visual selective attention was investigated. Participants ignored dist...
Face aftereffects are widely studied on the assumption that they provide a useful tool for investiga...
Recent parallels between neurophysiological and neuroimaging findings suggest that repeated stimulus...
Covert face recognition has previously been thought to produce only very short-lasting effects. In t...
International audienceA common view in face recognition research holds that there is a stored repres...
People have particular difficulty ignoring distractors that depict faces. This phenomenon has been a...
The “distinctiveness effect ” in face memory holds that distinctive faces are recognized better than...
In daily life, facial recognition is necessary in our interactions with people, creating a peaked in...
Models of face processing suggest that recognizing a person should prime recognition of a consecutiv...
A particularly interesting and somewhat puzzling finding in the face-processing literature is that, ...
The present study used masked repetition priming to examine whether face representations can be acce...
International audienceA series of studies conducted over the past 20 years have explored the effects...
Covert face recognition in neurologically-intact participants was investigated using very brief stim...
This dissertation seeks to unite two major streams of cognitive research that have traditionally pro...
When we look around, our subjective impression is of a highly detailed visual representation, which ...
The role of working memory in visual selective attention was investigated. Participants ignored dist...
Face aftereffects are widely studied on the assumption that they provide a useful tool for investiga...
Recent parallels between neurophysiological and neuroimaging findings suggest that repeated stimulus...