scholarly article | Q13442814 |
P356 | DOI | 10.1016/J.VISRES.2009.11.016 |
P698 | PubMed publication ID | 19944116 |
P50 | author | Tirta Susilo | Q44425270 |
Elinor McKone | Q59679372 | ||
P2093 | author name string | Mark Edwards | |
P2860 | cites work | Natural image statistics and neural representation | Q28214357 |
A face feature space in the macaque temporal lobe | Q28254398 | ||
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The composite task reveals stronger holistic processing in children than adults for child faces | Q33488552 | ||
Eigenfaces for recognition | Q34365548 | ||
The Cambridge Face Memory Test: results for neurologically intact individuals and an investigation of its validity using inverted face stimuli and prosopagnosic participants | Q34451841 | ||
The cross-category effect: mere social categorization is sufficient to elicit an own-group bias in face recognition | Q34660077 | ||
The many faces of configural processing | Q34662389 | ||
Typicality effects in face and object perception: further evidence for the attractor field model | Q34668277 | ||
Face adaptation does not improve performance on search or discrimination tasks | Q35218418 | ||
Pulling faces: an investigation of the face-distortion aftereffect | Q35598610 | ||
Transformation of shape information in the ventral pathway | Q36763343 | ||
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 perception | Q41053417 | ||
Shape discrimination and the judgement of perfect symmetry: dissociation of shape from size | Q41079769 | ||
Pattern-selective adaptation in visual cortical neurones | Q41582398 | ||
The psychometric function: I. Fitting, sampling, and goodness of fit. | Q44722108 | ||
From theory to implementation: building a multidimensional space for face recognition | Q45827976 | ||
The size-tuning of the face-distortion after-effect | Q47199148 | ||
Towards an exemplar model of face processing: the effects of race and distinctiveness | Q47292347 | ||
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 cortex | Q48464428 | ||
I thought you were looking at me: direction-specific aftereffects in gaze perception | Q48498194 | ||
Reduced fixation on the upper area of personally familiar faces following acquired prosopagnosia | Q48681326 | ||
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 Recognition | Q52050586 | ||
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 negatives | Q52237607 | ||
The psychometric function: II. Bootstrap-based confidence intervals and sampling. | Q52936805 | ||
Low-dimensional procedure for the characterization of human faces | Q56228593 | ||
Early visual experience and face processing | Q59092690 | ||
Discrimination of spatial relations and features in faces: effects of inversion and viewing duration | Q74457832 | ||
Synthetic faces, face cubes, and the geometry of face space | Q78569360 | ||
Fitting the mind to the world: face adaptation and attractiveness aftereffects | Q79312866 | ||
Family resemblance: ten family members with prosopagnosia and within-class object agnosia | Q81096073 | ||
Orientation-contingent face aftereffects and implications for face-coding mechanisms | Q81119941 | ||
Visual representation of eye gaze is coded by a nonopponent multichannel system | Q81259787 | ||
Viewer-centered object representation in the human visual system revealed by viewpoint aftereffects | Q81480578 | ||
Sensitivity of 4-year-olds to featural and second-order relational changes in face distinctiveness | Q82577627 | ||
View-specific coding of face shape | Q83984654 | ||
P433 | issue | 3 | |
P304 | page(s) | 300-314 | |
P577 | publication date | 2009-11-26 | |
P1433 | published in | Vision Research | Q1307852 |
P1476 | title | What shape are the neural response functions underlying opponent coding in face space? A psychophysical investigation | |
P478 | volume | 50 |
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Q35099209 | Are high-level aftereffects perceptual? |
Q58722265 | Crowding for faces is determined by visual (not holistic) similarity: Evidence from judgements of eye position |
Q50796831 | Enhanced attention amplifies face adaptation. |
Q34314144 | Evolving concepts of sensory adaptation |
Q50683887 | Face identity aftereffects increase monotonically with adaptor extremity over, but not beyond, the range of natural faces. |
Q35088394 | From single cells to social perception |
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Q44134549 | Not all face aftereffects are equal |
Q38108267 | Not just the norm: exemplar-based models also predict face aftereffects |
Q83160442 | Perceptual adaptation helps us identify faces |
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