Crossmodal priming of unfamiliar faces supports early interactions between voices and faces in person perception
نویسندگان
چکیده
منابع مشابه
Lateralized repetition priming for unfamiliar faces.
Repetition priming (RP) is the ability to recognize a stimulus more rapidly as a result of prior exposure to the item. Recent research examining the neuroanatomical basis of this effect has demonstrated RP for familiar faces presented to the right but not to the left cerebral hemisphere. Extending this line of enquiry, the current research considered whether similar effects emerge when unfamili...
متن کاملForm-specific repetition priming for unfamiliar faces.
It has frequently been demonstrated that repeated presentation of a stimulus can result in facilitated processing of the item, an effect termed repetition priming. Questions remain, however, regarding the boundary conditions of this effect, particularly for faces. For example, is repetition priming for unfamiliar faces dependent on the presentation of identical stimuli at study and test? This q...
متن کاملDistinctive voices enhance the visual recognition of unfamiliar faces
Several studies have provided evidence in favour of a norm-based representation of faces in memory. However, such models have hitherto failed to take account of how other person-relevant information affects face recognition performance. Here we investigated whether distinctive or typical auditory stimuli affect the subsequent recognition of previously unfamiliar faces and whether the type of au...
متن کاملRecognition of unfamiliar faces.
People are excellent at identifying faces familiar to them, even from very low quality images, but are bad at recognizing, or even matching, unfamiliar faces. In this review we shall consider some of the factors that affect our abilities to match unfamiliar faces. Major differences in orientation (e.g. inversion) or greyscale information (e.g. negation) affect face processing dramatically, and ...
متن کاملConfigurational factors in the perception of unfamiliar faces.
Young et al (1987) have demonstrated that the juxtaposition of top and bottom halves of different faces produces a powerful impression of a novel face. It is difficult to isolate perceptually either half of the 'new' face. Inversion of the stimulus, however, makes this task easier. Upright chimeric faces appear to evoke strong and automatic configurational processing mechanisms which interfere ...
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: Visual Cognition
سال: 2017
ISSN: 1350-6285,1464-0716
DOI: 10.1080/13506285.2017.1290729