We report results from two experiments in which subjects had to categorize briefly presented upright or inverted natural scenes. In the first experiment, subjects decided whether images contained animals or human faces presented at different scales. Behavioral results showed virtually identical processing speed between the two categories and very limited effects of inversion. One type of event-related potential (ERP) comparison, potentially capturing low-level physical differences, showed large effects with onsets at about 150 msec in the animal task. However, in the human face task, those differences started as early as 100 msec. In the second experiment, subjects responded to close-up views of animal faces or human faces in an attempt to ...
The human face is the most studied object category in visual neuroscience. In a quest for markers of...
Object categorization can be extremely fast. But among all objects, human faces might hold a special...
Behavioral studies have shown that picture-plane inversion impacts face and object recognition diffe...
International audienceWe report results from two experiments in which subjects had to categorize bri...
How early does the brain decode object categories? Addressing this question is critical to constrain...
The N170 is an event-related potential component reported to be very sensitive to human face stimuli...
Event-related potential (ERP) studies have highlighted an occipito-temporal potential, the N170, whi...
Hundreds of studies have investigated the early ERPs to faces and objects using scalp and intracrani...
Hundreds of studies have investigated the early ERPs to faces and objects using scalp and intracrani...
Investigating the temporal dynamics of natural image processing using event-related potentials (ERPs...
The ERP component N170 is face-sensitive, yet its specificity for faces is controversial. We recorde...
The animal vs. non-animal category differences in the visual event-related potentials (ERPs) are wid...
International audienceCognitive models of face perception suggest parallel levels of processing yet ...
International audienceUsing manual responses, human participants are remarkably fast and accurate at...
The human face is the most studied object category in visual neuroscience. In a quest for markers of...
The human face is the most studied object category in visual neuroscience. In a quest for markers of...
Object categorization can be extremely fast. But among all objects, human faces might hold a special...
Behavioral studies have shown that picture-plane inversion impacts face and object recognition diffe...
International audienceWe report results from two experiments in which subjects had to categorize bri...
How early does the brain decode object categories? Addressing this question is critical to constrain...
The N170 is an event-related potential component reported to be very sensitive to human face stimuli...
Event-related potential (ERP) studies have highlighted an occipito-temporal potential, the N170, whi...
Hundreds of studies have investigated the early ERPs to faces and objects using scalp and intracrani...
Hundreds of studies have investigated the early ERPs to faces and objects using scalp and intracrani...
Investigating the temporal dynamics of natural image processing using event-related potentials (ERPs...
The ERP component N170 is face-sensitive, yet its specificity for faces is controversial. We recorde...
The animal vs. non-animal category differences in the visual event-related potentials (ERPs) are wid...
International audienceCognitive models of face perception suggest parallel levels of processing yet ...
International audienceUsing manual responses, human participants are remarkably fast and accurate at...
The human face is the most studied object category in visual neuroscience. In a quest for markers of...
The human face is the most studied object category in visual neuroscience. In a quest for markers of...
Object categorization can be extremely fast. But among all objects, human faces might hold a special...
Behavioral studies have shown that picture-plane inversion impacts face and object recognition diffe...