Holistic processing of shape cues in face identification: Evidence from face inversion,composite faces,and acquired prosopagnosia |
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Authors: | Bruno Rossion |
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Affiliation: | 1. Institute for Research in Psychology and Institute of Neuroscience , Université Catholique de Louvain , Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium;2. Department of Psychology , University of Washington , Washington, USA;3. Fachgruppe Medieninformatik , University of Siegen , Siegen, Germany |
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Abstract: | According to a classical functional architecture of face processing (Bruce & Young, 1986), sex processing on faces is a parallel function to individual face recognition. One consequence of the model is thus that sex categorization on faces is not influenced by face familiarity. However, the behavioural and neuro-psychological evidences supporting this dissociation are yet equivocal. To test the independence between sex processing on faces and familiar face recognition, familiar (learned) faces were morphed with new faces, generating facial continua of visual similarity to familiar faces. First, a pilot experiment shown that subjects familiarized with one extreme of the face continuum roughly perceive one half of the continuum (60 to 100% of visual similarity to familiar faces) as made of familiar faces and the other part as unfamiliar. In the experiment proper, subjects were familiarized with faces and tested in a sex decision task made on faces at the different steps of the continua. Subjects were significantly quicker at telling the sex of faces perceived as familiar (60-100%), and the effect was not observed in a control (untrained) group. These results indicate that familiar face representations are activated before sex categorization is completed, and can facilitate this processing. The nature of the interaction between sex categorization on faces and familiar face recognition is discussed. |
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Keywords: | Acquired prosopagnosia Composite faces Face inversion Shape and surface reflectance |
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