A developmental study is presented in which participants must detect the Thatcher illusion in order to match unfamiliar faces on identity. 114 participants between 6 and 67 years of age completed a matching task whereby face pairs were presented upright or under inversion. At all ages, participants were more accurate matching upright than inverted faces. In an altered version of the Thatcher task, where only the eyes or mouth were inverted, all participants were more accurate and faster to detect eye manipulations than mouth manipulations. The results are discussed in terms of the developmental significance of face inversion, the Thatcher illusion, and the salience for protection from the Thatcher illusion
UnrestrictedInverted faces are recognized more slowly and less accurately than upright faces (Yin, 1...
The Thatcher illusion provides a compelling example of the perceptual cost of face inversion. The Th...
In the "Thatcher illusion" a face, in which the eyes and mouth are inverted relative to the rest of ...
Children do not show the same recognition disadvantage for inverted faces as adults do. It has been ...
The present study reports the ability of young children to detect the Thatcher illusion. Participant...
Adults readily detect changes in face patterns brought about by the inversion of eyes and mouth when...
Thompson (1980) first detected and described the Thatcher Illusion, where participants instantly per...
The discrimination of thatcherized faces from typical faces was explored in two simultaneous alterna...
The discrimination of thatcherized faces from typical faces was explored in two simultaneous alterna...
Inversion is especially detrimental to the processing of faces. This is clearly demonstrated by the ...
Bartlett and Searcy's recent account for the Thatcher illusion suggests that inversion impairs holis...
If the mouth and eyes of a face are inverted, the altered construction appears grotesque when uprigh...
The Thatcher illusion provides a compelling example of the face inversion effect. However, the marke...
The present study was aimed at exploring newborns\u2019 ability to recognize configural changes with...
In “Thatcherized” faces, the eyes and mouth regions are turned upside-down. Only when presented upri...
UnrestrictedInverted faces are recognized more slowly and less accurately than upright faces (Yin, 1...
The Thatcher illusion provides a compelling example of the perceptual cost of face inversion. The Th...
In the "Thatcher illusion" a face, in which the eyes and mouth are inverted relative to the rest of ...
Children do not show the same recognition disadvantage for inverted faces as adults do. It has been ...
The present study reports the ability of young children to detect the Thatcher illusion. Participant...
Adults readily detect changes in face patterns brought about by the inversion of eyes and mouth when...
Thompson (1980) first detected and described the Thatcher Illusion, where participants instantly per...
The discrimination of thatcherized faces from typical faces was explored in two simultaneous alterna...
The discrimination of thatcherized faces from typical faces was explored in two simultaneous alterna...
Inversion is especially detrimental to the processing of faces. This is clearly demonstrated by the ...
Bartlett and Searcy's recent account for the Thatcher illusion suggests that inversion impairs holis...
If the mouth and eyes of a face are inverted, the altered construction appears grotesque when uprigh...
The Thatcher illusion provides a compelling example of the face inversion effect. However, the marke...
The present study was aimed at exploring newborns\u2019 ability to recognize configural changes with...
In “Thatcherized” faces, the eyes and mouth regions are turned upside-down. Only when presented upri...
UnrestrictedInverted faces are recognized more slowly and less accurately than upright faces (Yin, 1...
The Thatcher illusion provides a compelling example of the perceptual cost of face inversion. The Th...
In the "Thatcher illusion" a face, in which the eyes and mouth are inverted relative to the rest of ...