What shape are the neural response functions underlying opponent coding in face space? A psychophysical investigation

scientific article published on 26 November 2009

What shape are the neural response functions underlying opponent coding in face space? A psychophysical investigation is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.1016/J.VISRES.2009.11.016
P698PubMed publication ID19944116

P50authorTirta SusiloQ44425270
Elinor McKoneQ59679372
P2093author name stringMark Edwards
P2860cites workNatural image statistics and neural representationQ28214357
A face feature space in the macaque temporal lobeQ28254398
The Effects of Distinctiveness in Recognising and Classifying FacesQ29029465
The composite task reveals stronger holistic processing in children than adults for child facesQ33488552
Eigenfaces for recognitionQ34365548
The Cambridge Face Memory Test: results for neurologically intact individuals and an investigation of its validity using inverted face stimuli and prosopagnosic participantsQ34451841
The cross-category effect: mere social categorization is sufficient to elicit an own-group bias in face recognitionQ34660077
The many faces of configural processingQ34662389
Typicality effects in face and object perception: further evidence for the attractor field modelQ34668277
Face adaptation does not improve performance on search or discrimination tasksQ35218418
Pulling faces: an investigation of the face-distortion aftereffectQ35598610
Transformation of shape information in the ventral pathwayQ36763343
Visual adaptation to convexity in macaque area V4.Q37300155
Psychophysical evidence for a non-linear representation of facial identity.Q37341491
Early maturity of face recognition: no childhood development of holistic processing, novel face encoding, or face-space.Q37417778
Why does picture-plane inversion sometimes dissociate perception of features and spacing in faces, and sometimes not? Toward a new theory of holistic processing.Q37611327
Eye movement strategies involved in face perceptionQ41053417
Shape discrimination and the judgement of perfect symmetry: dissociation of shape from sizeQ41079769
Pattern-selective adaptation in visual cortical neuronesQ41582398
The psychometric function: I. Fitting, sampling, and goodness of fit.Q44722108
From theory to implementation: building a multidimensional space for face recognitionQ45827976
The size-tuning of the face-distortion after-effectQ47199148
Towards an exemplar model of face processing: the effects of race and distinctivenessQ47292347
Factors governing the adaptation of cells in area-17 of the cat visual cortex.Q48147434
What's so special about the average face?Q48451013
Norm-based face encoding by single neurons in the monkey inferotemporal cortexQ48464428
I thought you were looking at me: direction-specific aftereffects in gaze perceptionQ48498194
Reduced fixation on the upper area of personally familiar faces following acquired prosopagnosiaQ48681326
About turn: the visual representation of human body orientation revealed by adaptation.Q48719214
Orientation dependence of the orientation-contingent face aftereffect.Q51803401
Fitting the child's mind to the world: adaptive norm-based coding of facial identity in 8-year-olds.Q51953593
Broadly tuned, view-specific coding of face shape: opposing figural aftereffects can be induced in different views.Q51970890
Adaptive norm-based coding of facial identity.Q51982912
The nature of synthetic face adaptation.Q51993223
Adaptive face coding and discrimination around the average face.Q51993727
Figural aftereffects in the perception of faces.Q52029093
A Unified Account of the Effects of Distinctiveness, Inversion, and Race in Face RecognitionQ52050586
Identification and ratings of caricatures: implications for mental representations of faces.Q52073398
Attending to faces: change detection, familiarization, and inversion effects.Q52108475
Prototype-referenced shape encoding revealed by high-level aftereffects.Q52142679
Comparison of eye movements over faces in photographic positives and negativesQ52237607
The psychometric function: II. Bootstrap-based confidence intervals and sampling.Q52936805
Low-dimensional procedure for the characterization of human facesQ56228593
Early visual experience and face processingQ59092690
Discrimination of spatial relations and features in faces: effects of inversion and viewing durationQ74457832
Synthetic faces, face cubes, and the geometry of face spaceQ78569360
Fitting the mind to the world: face adaptation and attractiveness aftereffectsQ79312866
Family resemblance: ten family members with prosopagnosia and within-class object agnosiaQ81096073
Orientation-contingent face aftereffects and implications for face-coding mechanismsQ81119941
Visual representation of eye gaze is coded by a nonopponent multichannel systemQ81259787
Viewer-centered object representation in the human visual system revealed by viewpoint aftereffectsQ81480578
Sensitivity of 4-year-olds to featural and second-order relational changes in face distinctivenessQ82577627
View-specific coding of face shapeQ83984654
P433issue3
P304page(s)300-314
P577publication date2009-11-26
P1433published inVision ResearchQ1307852
P1476titleWhat shape are the neural response functions underlying opponent coding in face space? A psychophysical investigation
P478volume50

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q28740887Adaptation and visual coding
Q34776957Adding years to your life (or at least looking like it): a simple normalization underlies adaptation to facial age
Q35099209Are high-level aftereffects perceptual?
Q58722265Crowding for faces is determined by visual (not holistic) similarity: Evidence from judgements of eye position
Q50796831Enhanced attention amplifies face adaptation.
Q34314144Evolving concepts of sensory adaptation
Q50683887Face identity aftereffects increase monotonically with adaptor extremity over, but not beyond, the range of natural faces.
Q35088394From single cells to social perception
Q52091409Intensity dependence in high-level facial expression adaptation aftereffect.
Q41817814Model Fitting Versus Curve Fitting: A Model of Renormalization Provides a Better Account of Age Aftereffects Than a Model of Local Repulsion
Q48366887Multi-level visual adaptation: dissociating curvature and facial-expression aftereffects produced by the same adapting stimuli
Q44134549Not all face aftereffects are equal
Q38108267Not just the norm: exemplar-based models also predict face aftereffects
Q83160442Perceptual adaptation helps us identify faces
Q51606741Similar neural adaptation mechanisms underlying face gender and tilt aftereffects.
Q35088404Visual adaptation and face perception

Search more.