scholarly article | Q13442814 |
P2093 | author name string | Zhe Wang | |
Kang Lee | |||
Paul C Quinn | |||
Yu-Hao P Sun | |||
Naiqi G Xiao | |||
Steve Perrotta | |||
P2860 | cites work | Putting culture under the 'spotlight' reveals universal information use for face recognition | Q21142626 |
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Age in the development of closure ability in children | Q28182000 | ||
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Caucasian Infants Scan Own- and Other-Race Faces Differently | Q29542904 | ||
The distributed human neural system for face perception | Q29619352 | ||
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Infants deploy selective attention to the mouth of a talking face when learning speech. | Q34252246 | ||
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A matching advantage for dynamic human faces. | Q34581289 | ||
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Importance of the inverted control in measuring holistic face processing with the composite effect and part-whole effect | Q36583812 | ||
What the human brain likes about facial motion | Q36736932 | ||
Psychological and neural perspectives on the role of motion in face recognition. | Q36917555 | ||
Three-month-olds, but not newborns, prefer own-race faces | Q36934540 | ||
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Development of the other-race effect during infancy: evidence toward universality? | Q37087943 | ||
I can't recognize your face but I can recognize its movement | Q37139718 | ||
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Natural facial motion enhances cortical responses to faces. | Q37371798 | ||
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Individual differences in holistic processing predict face recognition ability. | Q50343776 | ||
Own- and other-race face scanning in infants: implications for perceptual narrowing. | Q50624798 | ||
Extensive visual training in adulthood significantly reduces the face inversion effect. | Q50782913 | ||
The discriminability of local cues determines the strength of holistic face processing. | Q50953800 | ||
Face inversion disproportionately disrupts sensitivity to vertical over horizontal changes in eye position. | Q50958196 | ||
Timing constraints of temporal view association in face recognition. | Q50977240 | ||
Perception of Mooney faces by young infants: the role of local feature visibility, contrast polarity, and motion. | Q50986948 | ||
The effect of motion at encoding and retrieval for same- and other-race face recognition. | Q50988342 | ||
Recognizing people from dynamic and static faces and bodies: Dissecting identity with a fusion approach | Q51033089 | ||
Asymmetric relationships among perceptions of facial identity, emotion, and facial speech. | Q51092872 | ||
Interactions between the processing of gaze direction and facial expression. | Q51634443 | ||
The use of facial motion and facial form during the processing of identity. | Q51638849 | ||
Early experience predicts later plasticity for face processing: evidence for the reactivation of dormant effects. | Q51868163 | ||
Recognition of moving and static faces by young infants. | Q51891593 | ||
Configural processing and face viewpoint. | Q51892359 | ||
Left gaze bias in humans, rhesus monkeys and domestic dogs. | Q51947924 | ||
Matching identities of familiar and unfamiliar faces caught on CCTV images. | Q51962440 | ||
Holistic processing of faces: perceptual and decisional components. | Q51962876 | ||
Evidence of a shift from featural to configural face processing in infancy. | Q51974635 | ||
Exploring the role of characteristic motion when learning new faces. | Q51975860 | ||
Familiar other-race faces show normal holistic processing and are robust to perceptual stress. | Q51976511 | ||
Featural and configural face processing in adults and infants: a behavioral and electrophysiological investigation. | Q51978041 | ||
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Attention and memory for faces and actions in infancy: the salience of actions over faces in dynamic events. | Q52008841 | ||
Infants' discrimination of faces by using biological motion cues. | Q52025444 | ||
A search advantage for faces learned in motion. | Q52032298 | ||
Parts and wholes in face recognition. | Q52036512 | ||
Face processing in infancy: developmental changes in the use of different kinds of relational information. | Q52058459 | ||
Categorizing sex and identity from the biological motion of faces. | Q52130684 | ||
What can a moving face tell us? | Q52241111 | ||
Configurational information in face perception. | Q52258706 | ||
Infant perception of object unity from translatory motion in depth and vertical translation. | Q52262507 | ||
Infants' Perception of Natural and Distorted Arrangements of a Schematic Face | Q52294340 | ||
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Early visual experience and face processing | Q59092690 | ||
Are the perceptual biases found in chimeric face processing reflected in eye-movement patterns? | Q63437847 | ||
Recognizing moving faces: a psychological and neural synthesis | Q74210252 | ||
VISUAL EXPERIENCE IN INFANTS: DECREASED ATTENTION TO FAMILIAR PATTERNS RELATIVE TO NOVEL ONES | Q76910546 | ||
Holistic processing is finely tuned for faces of one's own race | Q79983463 | ||
Differential selectivity for dynamic versus static information in face-selective cortical regions | Q83806314 | ||
Face Recognition in Poor-Quality Video: Evidence From Security Surveillance | Q112075740 | ||
P407 | language of work or name | English | Q1860 |
P304 | page(s) | 633 | |
P577 | publication date | 2014-06-24 | |
P1433 | published in | Frontiers in Psychology | Q2794477 |
P1476 | title | On the facilitative effects of face motion on face recognition and its development | |
P478 | volume | 5 |
Q55299800 | An Integrated Neural Framework for Dynamic and Static Face Processing. |
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