412 results on '"Inversion Effect"'
Search Results
2. Converging evidence that left extrastriate body area supports visual sensitivity to social interactions
- Author
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Gandolfo, Marco, Abassi, Etienne, Balgova, Eva, Downing, Paul E., Papeo, Liuba, and Koldewyn, Kami
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
3. Cortical processing of dynamic bodies in the superior occipito-temporal regions of the infants’ brain: Difference from dynamic faces and inversion effect
- Author
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Kobayashi, Megumi, Kanazawa, So, Yamaguchi, Masami K., and O'Toole, Alice J.
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- 2021
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4. Social and perceptual decisions predict differences in face inversion neural correlates: Implications for development and face perception methods.
- Author
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Nelson, Cailee M., Webb, Sara Jane, and Hudac, Caitlin M.
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FACE perception , *SOCIAL cues , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *ADOLESCENT development , *SOCIAL perception - Abstract
Social attention, an important mechanism that orients people to social cues, is critical for the development of higher-ordered features of social cognition. Both endogenous (i.e. automatic and undirected) and exogenous (i.e. purposeful and directed) social attention is important for processing social features, yet there is limited work systematically addressing how different experimental manipulations modulate social attention. This study examined how endogenous and exogenous manipulations of a classic face inversion task influence ERP activity in adults (n = 71) and adolescent youth (n = 65). Results from Study 1 indicated a lack of task differences for P1 and N170 but a larger inversion effect for P3 when a social perceptual decision was required. Study 2 demonstrated developmental differences in the youth, such that youth and adults had opposite inversion effects for N170 and youth had no effect for the P3. These findings indicate that face perception neural markers are sensitive to exogenous decisions, with development still active in adolescence. This is important to consider when designing future studies, as task-based decisions may alter the neural responses to faces differentially by age. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. The heterogeneity of holistic processing profiles in developmental prosopagnosia: holistic processing is impaired but not absent.
- Author
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Leong, Bryan Qi Zheng, Hussain Ismail, Ahamed Miflah, Wong, Hoo Keat, and Estudillo, Alejandro J.
- Subjects
- *
PROSOPAGNOSIA , *HETEROGENEITY - Abstract
Although it is generally assumed that face recognition relies on holistic processing, whether face recognition deficits observed in Developmental Prosopagnosics (DPs) can be explained by impaired holistic processing is currently under debate. The mixed findings from past studies could be the consequence of DP's heterogeneous deficit nature and the use of different measures of holistic processing—the inversion, part-whole, and composite tasks—which showed a poor association among each other. The present study aimed to gain further insight into the role of holistic processing in DPs. Groups of DPs and neurotypicals completed three tests measuring holistic face processing and non-face objects (i.e., Navon task). At a group level, DPs showed (1) diminished, but not absent, inversion and part-whole effects, (2) comparable magnitudes of the composite face effect and (3) global precedence effect in the Navon task. However, single-case analyses showed that these holistic processing deficits in DPs are heterogeneous. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Stimulus Inversion and Emotional Expressions Independently Affect Face and Body Perception: An ERP Study
- Author
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Francesco Bossi, Paola Ricciardelli, and Davide Rivolta
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ERP ,N170 ,body perception ,inversion effect ,emotional expression ,face perception ,Medical technology ,R855-855.5 ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
Faces and bodies provide critical cues for social interaction and communication. Their structural encoding depends on configural processing, as suggested by the detrimental effect of stimulus inversion for both faces (i.e., face inversion effect - FIE) and bodies (body inversion effect - BIE). An occipito-temporal negative event-related potential (ERP) component peaking around 170 ms after stimulus onset (N170) is consistently elicited by human faces and bodies and is affected by the inversion of these stimuli. Albeit it is known that emotional expressions can boost structural encoding (resulting in larger N170 components for emotional than for neutral faces), little is known about body emotional expressions. Thus, the current study investigated the effects of different emotional expressions on structural encoding in combination with FIE and BIE. Three ERP components (P1, N170, P2) were recorded using a 128-channel electroencephalogram (EEG) when participants were presented with (upright and inverted) faces and bodies conveying four possible emotions (happiness, sadness, anger, fear) or no emotion (neutral). Results demonstrated that inversion and emotional expressions independently affected the Accuracy and amplitude of all ERP components (P1, N170, P2). In particular, faces showed specific effects of emotional expressions during the structural encoding stage (N170), while P2 amplitude (representing top-down conceptualisation) was modified by emotional body perception. Moreover, the task performed by participants (i.e., implicit vs. explicit processing of emotional information) differently influenced Accuracy and ERP components. These results support integrated theories of visual perception, thus speaking in favour of the functional independence of the two neurocognitive pathways (one for structural encoding and one for emotional expression analysis) involved in social stimuli processing. Results are discussed highlighting the neurocognitive and computational advantages of the independence between the two pathways.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Asynchrony enhances uncanniness in human, android, and virtual dynamic facial expressions
- Author
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Alexander Diel, Wataru Sato, Chun-Ting Hsu, and Takashi Minato
- Subjects
Asynchrony ,Configural processing ,Dynamic face emotion expression ,Inversion effect ,Uncanny valley ,Medicine ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 ,Science (General) ,Q1-390 - Abstract
Abstract Objective Uncanniness plays a vital role in interactions with humans and artificial agents. Previous studies have shown that uncanniness is caused by a higher sensitivity to deviation or atypicality in specialized categories, such as faces or facial expressions, marked by configural processing. We hypothesized that asynchrony, understood as a temporal deviation in facial expression, could cause uncanniness in the facial expression. We also hypothesized that the effect of asynchrony could be disrupted through inversion. Results Sixty-four participants rated the uncanniness of synchronous or asynchronous dynamic face emotion expressions of human, android, or computer-generated (CG) actors, presented either upright or inverted. Asynchrony vs. synchrony expressions increased uncanniness for all upright expressions except for CG angry expressions. Inverted compared with upright presentations produced less evident asynchrony effects for human angry and android happy expressions. These results suggest that asynchrony can cause dynamic expressions to appear uncanny, which is related to configural processing but different across agents.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Stimulus Inversion and Emotional Expressions Independently Affect Face and Body Perception: An ERP Study.
- Author
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Bossi, Francesco, Ricciardelli, Paola, and Rivolta, Davide
- Subjects
SELF-expression ,EMOTION recognition ,BODY image ,VISUAL perception ,EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) ,EMOTIONAL conditioning - Abstract
Faces and bodies provide critical cues for social interaction and communication. Their structural encoding depends on configural processing, as suggested by the detrimental effect of stimulus inversion for both faces (i.e., face inversion effect - FIE) and bodies (body inversion effect - BIE). An occipito-temporal negative event-related potential (ERP) component peaking around 170 ms after stimulus onset (N170) is consistently elicited by human faces and bodies and is affected by the inversion of these stimuli. Albeit it is known that emotional expressions can boost structural encoding (resulting in larger N170 components for emotional than for neutral faces), little is known about body emotional expressions. Thus, the current study investigated the effects of different emotional expressions on structural encoding in combination with FIE and BIE. Three ERP components (P1, N170, P2) were recorded using a 128-channel electroencephalogram (EEG) when participants were presented with (upright and inverted) faces and bodies conveying four possible emotions (happiness, sadness, anger, fear) or no emotion (neutral). Results demonstrated that inversion and emotional expressions independently affected the Accuracy and amplitude of all ERP components (P1, N170, P2). In particular, faces showed specific effects of emotional expressions during the structural encoding stage (N170), while P2 amplitude (representing top-down conceptualisation) was modified by emotional body perception. Moreover, the task performed by participants (i.e., implicit vs. explicit processing of emotional information) differently influenced Accuracy and ERP components. These results support integrated theories of visual perception, thus speaking in favour of the functional independence of the two neurocognitive pathways (one for structural encoding and one for emotional expression analysis) involved in social stimuli processing. Results are discussed highlighting the neurocognitive and computational advantages of the independence between the two pathways. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Asynchrony enhances uncanniness in human, android, and virtual dynamic facial expressions.
- Author
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Diel, Alexander, Sato, Wataru, Hsu, Chun-Ting, and Minato, Takashi
- Subjects
FACIAL expression ,FACIAL expression & emotions (Psychology) ,EMOTIONS ,SOCIAL interaction - Abstract
Objective: Uncanniness plays a vital role in interactions with humans and artificial agents. Previous studies have shown that uncanniness is caused by a higher sensitivity to deviation or atypicality in specialized categories, such as faces or facial expressions, marked by configural processing. We hypothesized that asynchrony, understood as a temporal deviation in facial expression, could cause uncanniness in the facial expression. We also hypothesized that the effect of asynchrony could be disrupted through inversion. Results: Sixty-four participants rated the uncanniness of synchronous or asynchronous dynamic face emotion expressions of human, android, or computer-generated (CG) actors, presented either upright or inverted. Asynchrony vs. synchrony expressions increased uncanniness for all upright expressions except for CG angry expressions. Inverted compared with upright presentations produced less evident asynchrony effects for human angry and android happy expressions. These results suggest that asynchrony can cause dynamic expressions to appear uncanny, which is related to configural processing but different across agents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Configural face processing and its influence on the timeline of mentalization
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Daniela Ruzzante and Jeroen Vaes
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Dehumanization ,Mentalization ,Configural face processing ,Inversion effect ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
When mentalization fails, dehumanization can occur. Perceiving others as lacking fundamental mental states is the basic principle of dehumanization. Past research has already demonstrated the influence of both perceptual and contextual information on mentalization, while a recent line of research has tried to distinguish mentalization in a two-stage process: a mind detection phase in which we first identify a mind in others thanks to primary visual cues and a mind attribution phase in which both perceptual and contextual information are integrated to finalize the attribution of mental states to others. The current research aimed at deepening our understanding of the timeline of the mentalization process by specifically manipulating a perceptual, visual cue that has been related to dehumanization: the configural face process. This process was tested adapting the inversion effect that allowed us to show for the first time how and when this effect impacts and modulates the timeline of mentalization. Results indicated that the inversion effect impacted the early mind detection phase and resulted later in time in the elaboration of inverted human stimuli as more object-like.
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- 2024
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11. Are social interactions preferentially attended in real-world scenes? Evidence from change blindness.
- Author
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Barzy, Mahsa, Morgan, Rachel, Cook, Richard, and Gray, Katie LH
- Subjects
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SOCIAL change , *COMPETITIVE advantage in business , *SOCIAL perception - Abstract
In change detection paradigms, changes to social or animate aspects of a scene are detected better and faster compared with non-social or inanimate aspects. While previous studies have focused on how changes to individual faces/bodies are detected, it is possible that individuals presented within a social interaction may be further prioritised, as the accurate interpretation of social interactions may convey a competitive advantage. Over three experiments, we explored change detection to complex real-world scenes, in which changes either occurred by the removal of (a) an individual on their own, (b) an individual who was interacting with others, or (c) an object. In Experiment 1 (N = 50), we measured change detection for non-interacting individuals versus objects. In Experiment 2 (N = 49), we measured change detection for interacting individuals versus objects. Finally, in Experiment 3 (N = 85), we measured change detection for non-interacting versus interacting individuals. We also ran an inverted version of each task to determine whether differences were driven by low-level visual features. In Experiments 1 and 2, we found that changes to non-interacting and interacting individuals were detected better and more quickly than changes to objects. We also found inversion effects for both non-interaction and interaction changes, whereby they were detected more quickly when upright compared with inverted. No such inversion effect was seen for objects. This suggests that the high-level, social content of the images was driving the faster change detection for social versus object targets. Finally, we found that changes to individuals in non-interactions were detected faster than those presented within an interaction. Our results replicate the social advantage often found in change detection paradigms. However, we find that changes to individuals presented within social interaction configurations do not appear to be more quickly and easily detected than those in non-interacting configurations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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12. The inversion effect on the cubic humanness-uncanniness relation in humanlike agents.
- Author
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Diel, Alexander, Wataru Sato, Chun-Ting Hsu, and Takashi Minato
- Subjects
FACIAL expression ,SYNCHRONIC order - Abstract
The uncanny valley describes the typically nonlinear relation between the esthetic appeal of artificial entities and their human likeness. The effect has been attributed to specialized (configural) processing that increases sensitivity to deviations from human norms. We investigate this effect in computer-generated, humanlike android and human faces using dynamic facial expressions. Angry and happy expressions with varying degrees of synchrony were presented upright and inverted and rated on their eeriness, strangeness, and human likeness. A sigmoidal function of human likeness and uncanniness ("uncanny slope") was found for upright expressions and a linear relation for inverted faces. While the function is not indicative of an uncanny valley, the results support the view that configural processing moderates the effect of human likeness on uncanniness and extend its role to dynamic facial expressions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Stimulus-Specific Individual Differences in Holistic Perception of Mooney Faces
- Author
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Canas-Bajo, Teresa and Whitney, David
- Subjects
holistic perception ,face perception ,Mooney faces ,individual differences ,inversion effect ,Psychology ,Cognitive Sciences - Abstract
Humans perceive faces holistically rather than as a set of separate features. Previous work demonstrates that some individuals are better at this holistic type of processing than others. Here, we show that there are unique individual differences in holistic processing of specific Mooney faces. We operationalized the increased difficulty of recognizing a face when inverted compared to upright as a measure of the degree to which individual Mooney faces were processed holistically by individual observers. Our results show that Mooney faces vary considerably in the extent to which they tap into holistic processing; some Mooney faces require holistic processing more than others. Importantly, there is little between-subject agreement about which faces are processed holistically; specific faces that are processed holistically by one observer are not by other observers. Essentially, what counts as holistic for one person is unique to that particular observer. Interestingly, we found that the per-face, per-observer differences in face discrimination only occurred for harder Mooney faces that required relatively more holistic processing. These findings suggest that holistic processing of hard Mooney faces depends on a particular observer's experience whereas processing of easier, cartoon-like Mooney faces can proceed universally for everyone. Future work using Mooney faces in perception research should take these stimulus-specific individual differences into account to best isolate holistic processing.
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- 2020
14. Spotting lesions in thorax X-rays at a glance: holistic processing in radiology
- Author
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Merim Bilalić, Thomas Grottenthaler, Thomas Nägele, and Tobias Lindig
- Subjects
Expertise ,Radiology ,Holistic processing ,Inversion effect ,Global impression ,Consciousness. Cognition ,BF309-499 - Abstract
Abstract Radiologists often need only a glance to grasp the essence of complex medical images. Here, we use paradigms and manipulations from perceptual learning and expertise fields to elicit mechanisms and limits of holistic processing in radiological expertise. In the first experiment, radiologists were significantly better at categorizing thorax X-rays when they were presented for 200 ms in an upright orientation than when they were presented upside-down. Medical students, in contrast, were guessing in both situations. When the presentation time was increased to 500 ms, allowing for a couple more glances, the radiologists improved their performance on the upright stimuli, but remained at the same level on the inverted presentation. The second experiment circumvented the holistic processing by immediately cueing a tissue within the X-rays, which may or may not contain a nodule. Radiologists were again better than medical students at recognizing whether the cued tissue was a nodule, but this time neither the inverted presentation nor additional time affected their performance. Our study demonstrates that holistic processing is most likely a continuous recurring process which is just as susceptible to the inversion effect as in other expertise domains. More importantly, our study also indicates that holistic-like processing readily occurs in complex stimuli (e.g., whole thorax X-rays) but is more difficult to find in uniform single parts of such stimuli (e.g., nodules).
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. The inversion effect on the cubic humanness-uncanniness relation in humanlike agents
- Author
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Alexander Diel, Wataru Sato, Chun-Ting Hsu, and Takashi Minato
- Subjects
configural processing ,dynamic facial expression ,emotion expression ,inversion effect ,uncanny valley ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
The uncanny valley describes the typically nonlinear relation between the esthetic appeal of artificial entities and their human likeness. The effect has been attributed to specialized (configural) processing that increases sensitivity to deviations from human norms. We investigate this effect in computer-generated, humanlike android and human faces using dynamic facial expressions. Angry and happy expressions with varying degrees of synchrony were presented upright and inverted and rated on their eeriness, strangeness, and human likeness. A sigmoidal function of human likeness and uncanniness (“uncanny slope”) was found for upright expressions and a linear relation for inverted faces. While the function is not indicative of an uncanny valley, the results support the view that configural processing moderates the effect of human likeness on uncanniness and extend its role to dynamic facial expressions.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. A language compatibility effect in fraction processing.
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Park, Jimin, Im, Soo-hyun, and Varma, Sashank
- Subjects
- *
VERBAL memory , *SHORT-term memory , *TASK performance , *LANGUAGE & languages , *SAPIR-Whorf hypothesis - Abstract
A language compatibility effect occurs when there is a match between what a language provides and what a mathematical task demands. Here, we investigated whether such an effect exists for fraction processing in English, which names the numerator first, versus Korean, which names the denominator first. We developed two new tasks: a fraction span task where participants view and then recall four fractions and a fraction identification task where they view one fraction and then another and judge whether the two fractions are the same or not. We generally found that English speakers were advantaged when the numerator drove task performance and Korean speakers were advantaged when the denominator was critical. These findings, particularly from the fraction identification task, were inconsistent with the attentional focus hypothesis, which proposes that the serialisation bias of a language guides which fraction component is attended to first. Rather, they were better explained by the verbal encoding hypothesis, which states that a necessary condition for observing language compatibility effects may be that the fraction components must be encoded in verbal working memory and rehearsed there. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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17. Face race and sex impact visual fixation strategies for upright and inverted faces in 3‐ to 6‐year‐old children.
- Author
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Farrell, Julia, Conte, Stefania, Barry‐Anwar, Ryan, and Scott, Lisa S.
- Abstract
Everyday face experience tends to be biased, such that infants and young children interact more often with own‐race and female faces leading to differential processing of faces within these groups relative to others. In the present study, visual fixation strategies were recorded using eye tracking to determine the extent to which face race and sex/gender impact a key index of face processing in 3‐ to 6‐year‐old children (n = 47). Children viewed male and female upright and inverted White and Asian faces while visual fixations were recorded. Face orientation was found to have robust effects on children's visual fixations, such that children exhibited shorter first fixation and average fixation durations and a greater number of fixations for inverted compared to upright face trials. First fixations to the eye region were also greater for upright compared to inverted faces. Fewer fixations and longer duration fixations were found for trials with male compared to female faces and for upright compared to inverted unfamiliar‐race faces, but not familiar‐race faces. These findings demonstrate evidence of differential fixation strategies toward different types of faces in 3‐ to 6‐year‐old children, illustrating the importance of experience in the development of visual attention to faces. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Using transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (tDCS) to modulate the faceinversion effect on the N170 ERP component.
- Author
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Civile, Ciro, Wooster, Brad, Curtis, Adam, McLaren, R., McLaren, I.P.L., and Lavric, Aureliu
- Subjects
Inversion effect ,tDCS ,N170 ,Perceptual learning - Abstract
In the present study, we combined tDCS and EEG to examine theelectrophysiological responses to the tDCS-induced effects onthe face inversion effect showed in recent studies. A double-blindprocedure with a between-subjects design (n=48) was used withthe subjects, recruited from the student population, beingrandomly assigned to either tDCS anodal or sham condition. ThetDCS stimulation was delivered over the DLPFC at Fp3 site for10 min at an intensity of 1.5mA while subjects engaged in anold/new recognition task traditionally used to obtain theinversion effect. The behavioural results generally confirmedprevious findings. Critically, the results from the N170 show aneffect of tDCS. Specifically, the tDCS procedure was able tomodulate the N170 peak component by reducing the inversioneffect on the latencies (i.e. less delay between upright andinverted faces) and by increasing the inversion effect on theamplitudes (i.e. larger N170 for inverted vs upright faces). Weinterpret the results based on the previous literature in regard tothe inversion effect on the N170 component.
- Published
- 2019
19. Face masks disrupt holistic processing and face perception in school-age children
- Author
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Andreja Stajduhar, Tzvi Ganel, Galia Avidan, R. Shayna Rosenbaum, and Erez Freud
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Face perception ,Holistic processing ,COVID-19 ,Inversion effect ,Masks ,Consciousness. Cognition ,BF309-499 - Abstract
Abstract Face perception is considered a remarkable visual ability in humans that is subject to a prolonged developmental trajectory. In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, mask-wearing has become mandatory for adults and children alike. Recent research shows that mask-wearing hinders face recognition abilities in adults, but it is unknown if the same holds true in school-age children in whom face perception is not fully developed. Here we tested children (n = 72, ages 6–14 years old) on the Cambridge Face Memory Test – Kids (CFMT-K), a validated measure of face perception performance. Faces were presented with or without masks and across two orientations (upright/inverted). The inclusion of face masks led to a profound deficit in face perception abilities. This decrement was more pronounced in children compared to adults, but only when task difficulty was adjusted across the two age groups. Additionally, children exhibited reliable correlations between age and the CFMT-K score for upright faces for both the mask and no-mask conditions. Finally, as previously observed in adults, children also showed qualitative differences in the processing of masked versus non-masked faces. Specifically, holistic processing, a hallmark of face perception, was disrupted for masked faces as suggested by a reduced face-inversion effect. Together, these findings provide evidence for substantial quantitative and qualitative alterations in the processing of masked faces in school-age children.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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20. Gauging response time distributions to examine the effect of facial expression inversion
- Author
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David L. Bimler and Galina V. Paramei
- Subjects
facial expressions of emotion ,inversion effect ,Same/Different task ,response times ,dual-process model ,ex-Gaussian distribution ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
IntroductionWe used images of facial expressions (FEs) of emotion in a speeded Same/Different task to examine (i) distributional characteristics of response times (RTs) in relation to inter-stimulus similarity and (ii) the impact of inversion on FE processing.MethodsStimuli were seven emotion prototypes, posed by one male and one female, and eight intermediate morphs. Image pairs (N = 225) were presented for 500 ms, upright or inverted, in a block design, each 100 times.ResultsFor both upright and inverted FEs, RTs were a non-monotonic function: median values were longest for stimulus pairs of intermediate similarity, decreasing for both more-dissimilar and more-similar pairs. RTs of “Same” and “Different” judgments followed ex-Gaussian distributions. The non-monotonicity is interpreted within a dual-process decision model framework as reflecting the infrequency of identical pairs, shifting the balance between the Same and Different processes. The effect of stimulus inversion was gauged by comparing RT-based multidimensional scaling solutions for the two presentation modes. Solutions for upright and inverted FEs showed little difference, with both displaying some evidence of categorical perception. The same features appeared in hierarchical clustering solutions.DiscussionThis outcome replicates and reinforces the solutions derived from accuracy of “Different” responses reported in our earlier companion paper. We attribute this lack of inversion effect to the brief exposure time, allowing low-level visual processing to dominate Same/Different decisions while elevating early featural analysis, which is insensitive to face orientation but enables initial positive/negative valence categorization of FEs.
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- 2023
- Full Text
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21. Changing face contours reduces the inversion effect and overall recognition performance
- Author
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Siobhan McCourt, I.P.L. McLaren, and Ciro Civile
- Subjects
Face recognition ,Inversion effect ,Visual processing ,Configural information ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
This paper investigates how manipulating the face contour would systematically influence the face inversion effect (i.e., better recognition performance for upright vs inverted upside-down faces) and overall face recognition. Experiment 1 (n=144) addressed the question of whether manipulating the face contour would affect the inversion effect for scrambled faces which have disrupted configural information. Our results revealed that blurring the face contour significantly reduced the inversion effect by means of impaired performance for upright scrambled faces. Experiment 2a (n=144) and Experiment 2b (n=144) examined how either blurring the contour or replacing it with a new contour would influence the inversion effect for normal faces. These results confirmed a reduction of the inversion effect mainly due to impaired performance for upright faces. A reduction in overall recognition performance was also recorded for normal faces with a manipulated contour. Experiment 3 (n=144) manipulated the contour of New Thatcherized faces which suffer from partial configural information disruption. The results revealed no influence on the inversion effect but a significant reduction in overall recognition performance. Taken together, our results suggest that face contour information can have an impact in influencing both the inversion effect and overall recognition performance.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Spotting lesions in thorax X-rays at a glance: holistic processing in radiology.
- Author
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Bilalić, Merim, Grottenthaler, Thomas, Nägele, Thomas, and Lindig, Tobias
- Subjects
X-rays ,MEDICAL students ,RADIOLOGY ,PERCEPTUAL learning ,RADIOLOGISTS - Abstract
Radiologists often need only a glance to grasp the essence of complex medical images. Here, we use paradigms and manipulations from perceptual learning and expertise fields to elicit mechanisms and limits of holistic processing in radiological expertise. In the first experiment, radiologists were significantly better at categorizing thorax X-rays when they were presented for 200 ms in an upright orientation than when they were presented upside-down. Medical students, in contrast, were guessing in both situations. When the presentation time was increased to 500 ms, allowing for a couple more glances, the radiologists improved their performance on the upright stimuli, but remained at the same level on the inverted presentation. The second experiment circumvented the holistic processing by immediately cueing a tissue within the X-rays, which may or may not contain a nodule. Radiologists were again better than medical students at recognizing whether the cued tissue was a nodule, but this time neither the inverted presentation nor additional time affected their performance. Our study demonstrates that holistic processing is most likely a continuous recurring process which is just as susceptible to the inversion effect as in other expertise domains. More importantly, our study also indicates that holistic-like processing readily occurs in complex stimuli (e.g., whole thorax X-rays) but is more difficult to find in uniform single parts of such stimuli (e.g., nodules). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Recognition of Masked Faces in the Era of the Pandemic: No Improvement Despite Extensive Natural Exposure.
- Author
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Freud, Erez, Di Giammarino, Daniela, Stajduhar, Andreja, Rosenbaum, R. Shayna, Avidan, Galia, and Ganel, Tzvi
- Subjects
- *
CORONAVIRUS diseases , *FACE perception , *FACE , *CROSS-sectional method , *GENDER - Abstract
Face masks, which became prevalent across the globe during the COVID-19 pandemic, have had a negative impact on face recognition despite the availability of critical information from uncovered face parts, especially the eyes. An outstanding question is whether face-mask effects would be attenuated following extended natural exposure. This question also pertains, more generally, to face-recognition training protocols. We used the Cambridge Face Memory Test in a cross-sectional study (N = 1,732 adults) at six different time points over a 20-month period, alongside a 12-month longitudinal study (N = 208). The results of the experiments revealed persistent deficits in recognition of masked faces and no sign of improvement across time points. Additional experiments verified that the amount of individual experience with masked faces was not correlated with the mask effect. These findings provide compelling evidence that the face-processing system does not easily adapt to visual changes in face stimuli, even following prolonged real-life exposure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. The inversion effect in word recognition: The effect of language familiarity and handwriting.
- Author
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Feizabadi, Monireh, Singh, Mehar, Albonico, Andrea, and Barton, Jason J. S.
- Subjects
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WORD recognition , *HANDWRITING , *LANGUAGE & languages - Abstract
Humans have expertise with visual words and faces. One marker of this expertise is the inversion effect. This is attributed to experience with those objects being biased towards a canonical orientation, rather than some inherent property of object structure or perceptual anisotropy. To confirm the role of experience, we measured inversion effects in word matching for familiar and unfamiliar languages. Second, we examined whether there may be more demands on reading expertise with handwritten stimuli rather than computer font, given the greater variability and irregularities in the former, with the prediction of larger inversion effects for handwriting. We recruited two cohorts of subjects, one fluent in Farsi and the other in Punjabi, neither of whom were able to read the other's language. Subjects performed a match-to-sample task with words in either computer fonts or handwritings. Subjects were more accurate and faster with their familiar language, even when it was inverted. Inversion effects were present for the familiar but not the unfamiliar language. The inversion effect in accuracy for handwriting was larger than that for computer fonts in the familiar language. We conclude that the word inversion effect is generated solely by orientation-biased experience, and that demands on this expertise are greater with handwriting than computer font. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Stimulus Inversion and Emotional Expressions Independently Affect Face and Body Perception: An ERP Study
- Author
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Bossi, F, Ricciardelli, P, Rivolta, D, Bossi, Francesco, Ricciardelli, Paola, Rivolta, Davide, Bossi, F, Ricciardelli, P, Rivolta, D, Bossi, Francesco, Ricciardelli, Paola, and Rivolta, Davide
- Abstract
Faces and bodies provide critical cues for social interaction and communication. Their structural encoding depends on configural processing, as suggested by the detrimental effect of stimulus inversion for both faces (i.e., face inversion effect - FIE) and bodies (body inversion effect - BIE). An occipito-temporal negative event-related potential (ERP) component peaking around 170 ms after stimulus onset (N170) is consistently elicited by human faces and bodies and is affected by the inversion of these stimuli. Albeit it is known that emotional expressions can boost structural encoding (resulting in larger N170 components for emotional than for neutral faces), little is known about body emotional expressions. Thus, the current study investigated the effects of different emotional expressions on structural encoding in combination with FIE and BIE. Three ERP components (P1, N170, P2) were recorded using a 128-channel electroencephalogram (EEG) when participants were presented with (upright and inverted) faces and bodies conveying four possible emotions (happiness, sadness, anger, fear) or no emotion (neutral). Results demonstrated that inversion and emotional expressions independently affected the Accuracy and amplitude of all ERP components (P1, N170, P2). In particular, faces showed specific effects of emotional expressions during the structural encoding stage (N170), while P2 amplitude (representing top-down conceptualisation) was modified by emotional body perception. Moreover, the task performed by participants (i.e., implicit vs. explicit processing of emotional information) differently influenced Accuracy and ERP components. These results support integrated theories of visual perception, thus speaking in favour of the functional independence of the two neurocognitive pathways (one for structural encoding and one for emotional expression analysis) involved in social stimuli processing. Results are discussed highlighting the neurocognitive and computational advan
- Published
- 2024
26. Developmental trajectories of expert perception processing of Chinese characters in primary school children
- Author
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Yini Sun, Jianping Wang, Qing Ye, Baiwei Liu, Ping Zhong, Chenglin Li, and Xiaohua Cao
- Subjects
Chinese character ,inversion effect ,left-side bias effect ,development ,cognition ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Previous studies have demonstrated that inversion effect and left-side bias are stable expertise markers in Chinese character processing among adults. However, it is less clear how these markers develop early on (i.e., among primary school students). Therefore, this study aimed to investigate the development of the two markers by comparing primary school-aged students of three age groups (Grade 1, Grade 3, and Grade 5) and adults in tests of inversion effect (Experiment 1) and left-sided bias effect (Experiment 2). The results replicated that both effects during Chinese character processing were present among adults. However, more importantly, the effects were different among primary school-aged students in different grades: the inversion effect was found as early as in Grade 1, but the left-side bias effect did not emerge in Grade 1 and as approximated that of adults until Grade 3. The study suggested a potential dissociation in developing different aspects of expertise during Chinese character processing in early childhood.
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- 2022
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27. Face masks disrupt holistic processing and face perception in school-age children.
- Author
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Stajduhar, Andreja, Ganel, Tzvi, Avidan, Galia, Rosenbaum, R. Shayna, and Freud, Erez
- Subjects
MEDICAL masks ,AGE groups ,MEMORY testing ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Face perception is considered a remarkable visual ability in humans that is subject to a prolonged developmental trajectory. In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, mask-wearing has become mandatory for adults and children alike. Recent research shows that mask-wearing hinders face recognition abilities in adults, but it is unknown if the same holds true in school-age children in whom face perception is not fully developed. Here we tested children (n = 72, ages 6–14 years old) on the Cambridge Face Memory Test – Kids (CFMT-K), a validated measure of face perception performance. Faces were presented with or without masks and across two orientations (upright/inverted). The inclusion of face masks led to a profound deficit in face perception abilities. This decrement was more pronounced in children compared to adults, but only when task difficulty was adjusted across the two age groups. Additionally, children exhibited reliable correlations between age and the CFMT-K score for upright faces for both the mask and no-mask conditions. Finally, as previously observed in adults, children also showed qualitative differences in the processing of masked versus non-masked faces. Specifically, holistic processing, a hallmark of face perception, was disrupted for masked faces as suggested by a reduced face-inversion effect. Together, these findings provide evidence for substantial quantitative and qualitative alterations in the processing of masked faces in school-age children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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28. The upside‐down self: One's own face recognition is affected by inversion.
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Alzueta, Elisabet, Kessel, Dominique, and Capilla, Almudena
- Subjects
- *
FACE perception , *SELF , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) - Abstract
One's own face is recognized more efficiently than any other face, although the neural mechanisms underlying this phenomenon remain poorly understood. Considering the extensive visual experience that we have with our own face, some authors have proposed that self‐face recognition involves a more analytical perceptual strategy (i.e., based on face features) than other familiar faces, which are commonly processed holistically (i.e., as a whole). However, this hypothesis has not yet been tested with brain activity data. In the present study, we employed an inversion paradigm combined with event‐related potential (ERP) recordings to investigate whether the self‐face is processed more analytically. Sixteen healthy participants were asked to identify their own face and a familiar face regardless of its orientation, which could either be upright or inverted. ERP analysis revealed an enhanced amplitude and a delayed latency for the N170 component when faces were presented in an inverted orientation. Critically, both the self and a familiar face were equally vulnerable to the inversion effect, suggesting that the self‐face is not processed more analytically than a familiar face. In addition, we replicated the recent finding that the attention‐related P200 component is a specific neural index of self‐face recognition. Overall, our results suggest that the advantage for self‐face processing might be better explained by the engagement of self‐related attentional mechanisms than by the use of a more analytical visuoperceptual strategy. Our findings have important implications for understanding how the self‐face is processed by the brain and suggest that the key element of such processing could be linked to social relevance rather than accumulated visual experience. Results presented in this work contribute toward the validation and expansion of the current Neural Model of the Self proposed by Sui and Gu (2017). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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29. Amplified inversion effects for moving biological stimuli remain largest for faces and bodies.
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Piepers, Daniel W, Stevens, Catherine J, Burke, Darren, and Robbins, Rachel A
- Subjects
- *
GERMAN shepherd dog , *STIMULUS & response (Psychology) - Abstract
Turning an object upside-down disrupts our ability to perceive it accurately, and this inversion effect is disproportionately larger for faces and whole bodies than most other objects. This disproportionate inversion effect is taken as an indicator of holistic processing for these stimuli. Large inversion effects are also found when viewing motion-only information from faces and bodies; however, these have not been compared to other moving objects in an identity task so it is unclear whether inversion effects remain disproportionately larger for faces and bodies when they are engaged in motion. The current study investigated the effect of inversion on static and moving unfamiliar faces, human bodies, and German Shepherd dogs in an old-new recognition memory task. Sensitivity and baseline corrected reaction time (RT) results revealed that inversion effects for faces and whole-bodies remained disproportionately larger than those for German Shepherd dogs, regardless of presentation type, suggesting that both static and moving faces and bodies are processed holistically. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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30. The Inversion Effect as a Measure of Social Acceptance of Robots.
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Momen, Ali and Wiese, Eva
- Subjects
SOCIAL acceptance ,SOCIAL robots ,HUMAN-robot interaction ,ROBOTS ,MEASURING instruments - Abstract
If robots could engage face-processing they would increase the likelihood they are accepted as social companions. However, research has not examined whether and when robot "faces" engage face-processing. The current study examined whether facial-width-to-height ratio (FWHR) modulated faceprocessing with robots using the "inversion task"-a commonly utilized measure of face perception that leverages the finding that inverting face stimuli hurts recognition performance (i.e., inversion effects) compared to other types of stimuli. We predicted that recognition performance would be more effected by inversion when robots had a low rather than high FWHR. While our statistical results were not significant, descriptive results trended in favor of our hypothesis, demonstrating robots with a lower FHWR had larger inversion effects than robot with a higher FWHR. While more research will be needed to clarify these results, the inversion task is a potentially useful tool to measure the social acceptance of robots through the detection of facial processing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
31. Rethinking the uncanny valley as a moderated linear function: Perceptual specialization increases the uncanniness of facial distortions.
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Diel, Alexander and Lewis, Michael
- Subjects
- *
STATISTICAL models , *RECOGNITION (Psychology) , *AESTHETICS , *UNDERGRADUATES , *DRAWING , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *ROBOTICS , *VISUAL perception , *FACIAL expression , *FACE perception , *USER interfaces - Abstract
The relationship between artificial entities' human likeness and aesthetic preference is thought to be best modelled by an N -shaped cubic "uncanny valley" function, which however suffers from conceptual criticisms and lack of parsimony. Here it is argued that uncanniness effects may instead be modelled by a linear function of deviation moderated by perceptual specialization. The two models are compared in an experiment with five incrementally distorted face types (cartoon, CG, drawing, real, robot). Recognition performance for upright and inverted faces were used as a specialization measure. Specialization significantly moderated the linear effect of distortion on uncanniness, and could explain the data better than a conventional uncanny valley. The uncanny valley may thus be better understood as a moderated linear function of specialization sensitizing the uncanniness of deviating stimuli. This simpler yet more accurate model is compatible with neurocognitive theories and can explain uncanniness effects beyond the conventional uncanny valley. • Face realism affects both specialization and deviation sensitivity. • Specialization moderates the effect of deviation on uncanniness in faces. • This moderated linear function explains uncanniness better than a cubic "uncanny valley" model. • Parsimony, accuracy, generalizability, and plausibility of the moderation model over the uncanny valley are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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32. Chinese Aesthetic Mask: Three Forehead and Five Eyes—Holistic Processing and Facial Attractiveness.
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Lin, Jia and Zhou, Guomei
- Subjects
- *
FACE , *FACIAL expression , *INTERPERSONAL attraction , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *CHINESE aesthetics - Abstract
Human face processing has been attributed to holistic processing. Here, we ask whether humans are sensitive to configural information when perceiving facial attractiveness. By referring to a traditional Chinese aesthetic theory—Three Forehead and Five Eyes—we generated a series of faces that differed in spacing between facial features. We adopted a two-alternative forced-choice task in Experiment 1 and a rating task in Experiment 2 to assess attractiveness. Both tasks showed a consistent result: The faces which fit the Chinese aesthetic theory were chosen or rated as most attractive. This effect of configural information on facial attractiveness was larger for faces with highly attractive features than for faces with low attractive features. These findings provide experimental evidence for the traditional Chinese aesthetic theory. This issue can be further explored from the perspective of culture in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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33. Recognizing Chinese Characters in Peripheral Vision: Different Levels of Processing of Character.
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Feng, Manni, Sun, Dan, and Zhang, Ye
- Subjects
PERIPHERAL vision ,CHINESE characters ,PATTERN recognition systems - Abstract
It hasn't been clear how holistic and analytic processing contribute to character recognition yet. The current study focused on two issues: (1) whether configural processing is sufficient to support the performance of identifying characters in absence of analytic processing; (2) whether configural processing involves multiple levels of character recognition. We examined the inversion effect in different levels of character processing from foveal to peripheral vision. Participants were asked to identify the stimulus from nine alternatives after a stimulus (character, radical, and stroke) is presented either in upright or inverted orientation. The results showed that the identification of characters and radicals had robust peripheral inversion effects at the locations of 6.2° and 12.2°, but the identification accuracies of inverted stimulus (parts only) remained above chance. These findings suggested that the configural processing of characters could not be isolated from analytical processing in the periphery in the current study. Furthermore, the greater inversion effect shown for characters than radicals at 6.2° might indicate that holistic processing of characters involves two levels of configurations: character structure and radical processing. The peripheral inversion effect for stroke was also observed and the role of stroke-based analytic in character recognition was discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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34. Stimulus-Specific Individual Differences in Holistic Perception of Mooney Faces
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Teresa Canas-Bajo and David Whitney
- Subjects
holistic perception ,face perception ,Mooney faces ,individual differences ,inversion effect ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Humans perceive faces holistically rather than as a set of separate features. Previous work demonstrates that some individuals are better at this holistic type of processing than others. Here, we show that there are unique individual differences in holistic processing of specific Mooney faces. We operationalized the increased difficulty of recognizing a face when inverted compared to upright as a measure of the degree to which individual Mooney faces were processed holistically by individual observers. Our results show that Mooney faces vary considerably in the extent to which they tap into holistic processing; some Mooney faces require holistic processing more than others. Importantly, there is little between-subject agreement about which faces are processed holistically; specific faces that are processed holistically by one observer are not by other observers. Essentially, what counts as holistic for one person is unique to that particular observer. Interestingly, we found that the per-face, per-observer differences in face discrimination only occurred for harder Mooney faces that required relatively more holistic processing. These findings suggest that holistic processing of hard Mooney faces depends on a particular observer’s experience whereas processing of easier, cartoon-like Mooney faces can proceed universally for everyone. Future work using Mooney faces in perception research should take these stimulus-specific individual differences into account to best isolate holistic processing.
- Published
- 2020
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35. Body-Posture Recognition by Undergraduate Students Majoring in Physical Education and Other Disciplines
- Author
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Weidong Tao, Bixuan Du, Bing Li, Weiqi He, and Hong-Jin Sun
- Subjects
body posture recognition ,configural processing ,inversion effect ,expertise recognition ,face specific processing ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Humans are more proficient at processing visual display of body posture when the body is in upright orientation, compared to when inverted (inversion effect). Here we investigated whether extensive exposure or expertise on body posture recognition would affect the efficiency with which body-posture is processed. Using whole-body and piecemeal-body postures as stimuli, we performed two experiments to investigate whether body-posture recognition differed between two groups of participants: undergraduates majoring in physical education (PE) and those in other subjects (non-PE), respectively. These two groups differed significantly in the frequency and intensity of exercise per day and/or accumulated exercise time. In our experiments, following initial presentation of an image of a body posture, participants were shown the same or a different stimulus and were asked to report whether or not they had been previously shown the same image. The orientations of the body postures were also varied between trials. Our results showed that, in Experiment 1, for whole-body posture recognition, both the PE and non-PE groups showed a robust body-inversion effect in terms of both error rate and reaction time (RT), but the magnitude of the body-inversion effect in the RT measure was greater in the PE than the non-PE group. In Experiment 2, for piecemeal-body postures, both groups showed the inversion effect in terms of both error rate and RT measures and the PE group made fewer overall errors than the non-PE group. These cumulative results suggest that a superiority effect exists for PE participants compared with non-PE participants. Our results are generally consistent with the expertise hypothesis.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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36. Exploring biological motion perception in two-stream convolutional neural networks.
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Peng, Yujia, Lee, Hannah, Shu, Tianmin, and Lu, Hongjing
- Subjects
- *
MOTION perception (Vision) , *CONVOLUTIONAL neural networks , *OPTICAL flow , *OBJECT recognition (Computer vision) , *INFORMATION retrieval , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *EVALUATION research , *COMPARATIVE studies , *VISUAL perception , *NATURE - Abstract
Visual recognition of biological motion recruits form and motion processes supported by both dorsal and ventral pathways. This neural architecture inspired the two-stream convolutional neural network (CNN) model, which includes a spatial CNN to process appearance information in a sequence of image frames, a temporal CNN to process optical flow information, and a fusion network to integrate the features extracted by the two CNNs and make final decisions about action recognition. In five simulations, we compared the CNN model's performance with classical findings in biological motion perception. The CNNs trained with raw RGB action videos showed weak performance in recognizing point-light actions. Additional transfer training with actions shown in other display formats (e.g., skeletal) was necessary for CNNs to recognize point-light actions. The CNN models exhibited largely viewpoint-dependent recognition of actions, with a limited ability to generalize to viewpoints close to the training views. The CNNs predicted the inversion effect in the presence of global body configuration, but failed to predict the inversion effect driven solely by local motion signals. The CNNs provided a qualitative account of some behavioral results observed in human biological motion perception for fine discrimination tasks with noisy inputs, such as point-light actions with disrupted local motion signals, and walking actions with temporally misaligned motion cues. However, these successes are limited by the CNNs' lack of adaptive integration for form and motion processes, and failure to incorporate specialized mechanisms (e.g., a life detector) as well as top-down influences on biological motion perception. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. How chimpanzees and children perceive other species' bodies: Comparing the expert effect.
- Author
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Gao, Jie and Tomonaga, Masaki
- Subjects
- *
CHIMPANZEES , *PRESCHOOL children , *HUMAN body , *HORSE shows , *TOUCH screens - Abstract
Human adults are better at recognizing upright bodies than inverted bodies. This inversion effect is also found for objects with which they have expertise, which is called the expert effect. This study aims to investigate its evolutionary and developmental aspects by testing humans' closest relatives, chimpanzees, and preschool children. Chimpanzees show the inversion effect to chimpanzee bodies, but it is not clear how they perceive other species' bodies. We tested seven chimpanzees in matching‐to‐sample tasks on touch screens using upright and inverted stimuli, and examined their accuracy and response time. In a previous study, they did not show the inversion effect for bipedal humans in unfamiliar postures, but here in this study they showed it to bipedal humans with familiar postures or crawling postures. This suggests the existence of the expert effect in non‐human primates, and that visual or embodied experience is needed to invoke it. It is also supported by the inversion effect they exhibit for horses who share quadrupedal postures, but which they have never seen. Additionally, for conspecifics, the inversion effect was shown regardless of the postures. We tested 33 preschool children using a similar method. They showed the inversion effect to human bodies, but not houses, suggesting the configural processing for bodies, which is found to be stable at the preschool stage. They also showed the inversion effect for chimpanzees and horses, indicating the important role of experience in shaping the ways of object processing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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38. Evidence for altered configural body processing in women at risk of disorders characterized by body image disturbance.
- Author
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Groves, Katie, Kennett, Steffan, and Gillmeister, Helge
- Subjects
- *
FACIAL anatomy , *BODY image , *CONVALESCENCE , *RISK assessment , *SELF-perception , *SEX distribution , *VISUAL perception , *HOME environment , *ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Two studies were conducted to assess appearance‐related visual processing mechanisms in populations at risk of disorders characterized by body image disturbance. Using inverted stimuli, Experiment 1 assessed visual processing mechanisms associated with body, face, and house viewing in adolescents. Experiment 2 applied the same protocol to assess appearance‐related configural processing in high‐ and low‐risk adolescent women, and women recovering from disorders characterized by body image disturbance. Experiment 1 found evidence for typical configural face and body processing, although adolescent women reported higher levels of body image concern (BIC) and self‐objectified to a greater extent than adolescent men. In Experiment 2, typical body inversion effects were seen in the low‐risk group, whilst there was some evidence to suggest a disruption to the configural processing of body stimuli in high‐risk adolescents and in women recovering from body image disorders. Women in recovery were also quicker to respond to all stimuli, whilst high‐risk adolescents took longer to respond to bodies than to other stimuli. Configural face processing was intact in all groups, and effects did not directly relate to BIC or self‐objectification. These findings have implications for future research looking to inform early interventions and treatment, suggesting that there could be a tendency to visually process individual body parts at the expense of the whole‐body form in women at risk of developing body image disorders, as well as those in recovery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Body Perception in Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes): The Effect of Body Structure Changes.
- Author
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Gao, Jie and Tomonaga, Masaki
- Abstract
Chimpanzees have been found to show the inversion effect to visual stimuli of intact chimpanzee bodies, suggesting that they have a specific way of body processing. In this study, we examined how changes of body structures affect the inversion effect to reveal the properties of their body processing. We focused on two aspects of body structures: the first-order relations (i.e., body part arrangements) and body proportions. The experimental conditions had stimuli of chimpanzee bodies with scrambled first-order relations in Experiment 1 and chimpanzee bodies with distorted body proportions in Experiment 2. Both experiments had a control condition consisting of stimuli of intact chimpanzee bodies. A total of 7 chimpanzees participated in matching-to-sample tasks on touch screens. In each trial, the stimuli were chimpanzee bodies with the same kind of manipulation of body structures and were either all upright or all inverted. We compared their performances in the upright and inverted trials to examine the inversion effect. The chimpanzees did not show any inversion effect to scrambled bodies but showed the inversion effect to distorted bodies and to intact bodies. The results suggest that chimpanzees' configural body processing relies on correct first-order relations, and distorted body proportions do not interfere with configural processing. It also implies that chimpanzees may have knowledge of the arrangement of body parts, but they may be less sensitive to body proportions. This study could facilitate the understanding of the evolution of visual processing of bodies, faces, and other objects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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40. Inversion Effect
- Author
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Volkmar, Fred R., editor
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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41. Eye Tracking Research on the Influence of Spatial Frequency and Inversion Effect on Facial Expression Processing in Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
- Author
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Kun Zhang, Yishuang Yuan, Jingying Chen, Guangshuai Wang, Qian Chen, and Meijuan Luo
- Subjects
autism spectrum disorder ,facial expression processing ,eye tracking ,spatial frequency ,inversion effect ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Facial expression processing mainly depends on whether the facial features related to expressions can be fully acquired, and whether the appropriate processing strategies can be adopted according to different conditions. Children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) have difficulty accurately recognizing facial expressions and responding appropriately, which is regarded as an important cause of their social disorders. This study used eye tracking technology to explore the internal processing mechanism of facial expressions in children with ASD under the influence of spatial frequency and inversion effects for improving their social disorders. The facial expression recognition rate and eye tracking characteristics of children with ASD and typical developing (TD) children on the facial area of interest were recorded and analyzed. The multi-factor mixed experiment results showed that the facial expression recognition rate of children with ASD under various conditions was significantly lower than that of TD children. TD children had more visual attention to the eyes area. However, children with ASD preferred the features of the mouth area, and lacked visual attention and processing of the eyes area. When the face was inverted, TD children had the inversion effect under all three spatial frequency conditions, which was manifested as a significant decrease in expression recognition rate. However, children with ASD only had the inversion effect under the LSF condition, indicating that they mainly used a featural processing method and had the capacity of configural processing under the LSF condition. The eye tracking results showed that when the face was inverted or facial feature information was weakened, both children with ASD and TD children would adjust their facial expression processing strategies accordingly, to increase the visual attention and information processing of their preferred areas. The fixation counts and fixation duration of TD children on the eyes area increased significantly, while the fixation duration of children with ASD on the mouth area increased significantly. The results of this study provided theoretical and practical support for facial expression intervention in children with ASD.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Complex visual analysis of ecologically relevant signals in Siamese fighting fish.
- Author
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Neri, Peter
- Subjects
- *
MATHEMATICAL complex analysis , *ZEBRA danio , *FISHES , *SOCIAL perception , *SOCIAL accounting , *MAMMALS - Abstract
We currently have limited knowledge about complex visual representations in teleosts. For the specific case of Siamese fighting fish (Betta splendens), we do not know whether they can represent much more than mere colour or size. In this study, we assess their visual capabilities using increasingly complex stimulus manipulations akin to those adopted in human psychophysical studies of higher-level perceptual processes, such as face recognition. Our findings demonstrate a surprisingly sophisticated degree of perceptual representation. Consistent with previous work in established teleost models like zebrafish (Danio rerio), we find that fighting fish can integrate different features (e.g. shape and motion) for visually guided behaviour; this integration process, however, operates in a more holistic fashion in the fighting fish. More specifically, their analysis of complex spatiotemporal patterns is primarily global rather than local, meaning that individual stimulus elements must cohere into an organized percept for effective behavioural drive. The configural nature of this perceptual process is reminiscent of how mammals represent socially relevant signals, notwithstanding the lack of cortical structures that are widely recognized to play a critical role in higher cognitive processes. Our results indicate that mammalian-centric accounts of social cognition present serious conceptual limitations, and in so doing they highlight the importance of understanding complex perceptual function from a general ethological perspective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. EFECTOS DE LA EXPRESIÓN EMOCIONAL Y DE LA ORIENTACIÓN DEL ROSTRO SOBRE LAS RESPUESTAS CONDUCTUALES Y EL COMPONENTE N170.
- Author
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MAURICIO BONILLA, FIDEL and DAVID LEONGÓMEZ, JUAN
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. External and internal facial features modulate processing of vertical but not horizontal spatial relations.
- Author
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Meinhardt, Günter, Kurbel, David, Meinhardt-Injac, Bozana, and Persike, Malte
- Subjects
- *
FACE perception , *VISUAL perception , *FACE , *PERSPECTIVE (Art) ,VISION research - Abstract
Some years ago an asymmetry was reported for the inversion effect for horizontal (H) and vertical (V) relational face manipulations (Goffaux & Rossion, 2007). Subsequent research examined whether a specific disruption of long-range relations underlies the H/V inversion asymmetry (Sekunova & Barton, 2008). Here, we tested how detection of changes in interocular distance (H) and eye height (V) depends on cardinal internal features and external feature surround. Results replicated the H/V inversion asymmetry. Moreover, we found very different face cue dependencies for both change types. Performance and inversion effects did not depend on the presence of other face cues for detecting H changes. In contrast, accuracy for detecting V changes strongly depended on internal and external features, showing cumulative improvement when more cues were added. Inversion effects were generally large, and larger with external feature surround. The cue independence in detecting H relational changes indicates specialized local processing tightly tuned to the eyes region, while the strong cue dependency in detecting V relational changes indicates a global mechanism of cue integration across different face regions. These findings suggest that the H/V asymmetry of the inversion effect rests on an H/V anisotropy of face cue dependency, since only the global V mechanism suffers from disruption of cue integration as the major effect of face inversion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. The Relationship Between Social Power and Sexual Objectification: Behavioral and ERP Data
- Author
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Lijuan Xiao, Baolin Li, Lijun Zheng, and Fang Wang
- Subjects
power ,sexual objectification ,analytical processing ,configural processing ,inversion effect ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Sexual objectification is very common in modern Western societies, especially toward women. Previous research has suggested that in Western cultures, social power could lead to objectification. Specifically, power activates an approaching tendency toward useful targets, in turn leading to instrumental objectification and sexual objectification of targets. However, previous research has mostly focused on Western cultures, and the neural correlates underlying this phenomenon remain unclear. To examine whether the effects of power can be generalized to Chinese cultural contexts and how power promotes the objectification of sexualized bodies, we conducted two studies using Chinese samples. In Study 1, we replicated the behavioral effects of social power on sexual objectification. Specifically, we found that power increased sexual objectification toward sexualized female rather than male bodies. In Study 2, we examined the absence of an N170 amplitude inversion effect as a possible neural correlate of sexual objectification and replicated the effects of power on sexual objectification through event-related potentials (ERPs). For participants in a high-power group, the N170 amplitude inversion effect emerged when processing sexualized male bodies (less sexual objectification) but not female bodies (more sexual objectification); this effect was not seen for those participants in a low-power group. Our findings provide behavioral and neural data that power leads to increased sexual objectification toward sexualized women in Chinese participants.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Adults' Markers of Face Processing Are Present at Age 6 and Are Interconnected Along Development.
- Author
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Mardo, Elite, Avidan, Galia, and Hadad, Bat-Sheva
- Abstract
Recent studies on the development of face processing argue for a late, quantitative, domain-specific development of face processing, and face memory in particular. Most previous findings were based on separately tracking the developmental course of face perception skills, comparing performance across different age groups. Here, we adopted a different approach studying the mechanisms underlying the development of face processing by focusing on how different face skills are interrelated over the years (age 6 to adulthood). Specifically, we examined correlations within and between different categories of tasks: face domain-specific skills involving face recognition based on long-term representations (famous face), and short-term memory retention (Cambridge Face Memory Test), perceptual face-specific marker (inversion effect), global effects in scene perception (global--local task), and the perception of facial expressions. Factor analysis revealed that face identity skills have a similar pattern of interrelations throughout development, identifying two factors: a face domain-specific factor comprising adultlike markers of face processing and a general factor incorporating related, but nonspecific perceptual skills. Domain-specific age-related changes in face recognition entailing short- and long-term retention of face representations were observed, along with mature perceptual face-specific markers and more general perceptual effects predicting face perception skills already at age 6. The results suggest that the domain-specific changes in face processing are unlikely to result from developmental changes in perceptual skills driving face recognition. Instead, development may either involve improvement in the ability to retain face representations in memory or changes in the interactions between the perceptual representations of faces and their representations in long-term memory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The perception of (naked only) bodies and faceless heads relies on holistic processing: Evidence from the inversion effect.
- Author
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Bonemei, Rob, Costantino, Andrea I., Battistel, Ilenia, and Rivolta, Davide
- Subjects
- *
HUMAN body , *FACE , *SENSORY stimulation , *VISUAL perception , *EXECUTIVE function ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Faces and bodies are more difficult to perceive when presented inverted than when presented upright (i.e., stimulus inversion effect), an effect that has been attributed to the disruption of holistic processing. The features that can trigger holistic processing in faces and bodies, however, still remain elusive. In this study, using a sequential matching task, we tested whether stimulus inversion affects various categories of visual stimuli: faces, faceless heads, faceless heads in body context, headless bodies naked, whole bodies naked, headless bodies clothed, and whole bodies clothed. Both accuracy and inversion efficiency score results show inversion effects for all categories but for clothed bodies (with and without heads). In addition, the magnitude of the inversion effect for face, naked body, and faceless heads was similar. Our findings demonstrate that the perception of faces, faceless heads, and naked bodies relies on holistic processing. Clothed bodies (with and without heads), on the other side, may trigger clothes‐sensitive rather than body‐sensitive perceptual mechanisms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. 基于可见-近红外反射光谱的土壤碳酸钙含量与反演效果关系研究.
- Author
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林卡, 李德成, 刘峰, and 张甘霖
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Inversion Reveals Perceptual Asymmetries in the Configural Processing of Human Body
- Author
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Daniele Marzoli, Chiara Lucafò, Caterina Padulo, Giulia Prete, Laura Giacinto, and Luca Tommasi
- Subjects
human body ,handedness ,perceptual asymmetries ,configural processing ,inversion effect ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Ambiguous human bodies performing unimanual/unipedal actions are perceived more frequently as right-handed/footed rather than left-handed/footed, which suggests a perceptual and attentional bias toward the right side of others’ body. A bias toward the right arm of human bodies could be adaptive in social life, most social interactions occurring with right-handed individuals, and the implicit knowledge that the dominant hand of humans is usually placed on their right side might also be included in body configural information. Given that inversion disrupts configural processing for human bodies, we investigated whether inversion reduces the bias toward the right side of human bodies. Consistent with our hypothesis, when presented with ambiguous stimuli depicting humans performing lateralized actions or movements, participants perceived a greater proportion of right-handed figures when the stimuli were shown upright than when the stimuli were shown inverted. The present findings seem to confirm our hypothesis that body configural information may include some form of knowledge about the probable handedness of other individuals, although alternative accounts involving the role of experience cannot be ruled out.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Inversion Reveals Perceptual Asymmetries in the Configural Processing of Human Body.
- Author
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Marzoli, Daniele, Lucafò, Chiara, Padulo, Caterina, Prete, Giulia, Giacinto, Laura, and Tommasi, Luca
- Subjects
MIND & body ,HUMAN body ,HANDEDNESS ,PERCEPTUAL motor learning ,LOCOMOTION ,PHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
Ambiguous human bodies performing unimanual/unipedal actions are perceived more frequently as right-handed/footed rather than left-handed/footed, which suggests a perceptual and attentional bias toward the right side of others' body. A bias toward the right arm of human bodies could be adaptive in social life, most social interactions occurring with right-handed individuals, and the implicit knowledge that the dominant hand of humans is usually placed on their right side might also be included in body configural information. Given that inversion disrupts configural processing for human bodies, we investigated whether inversion reduces the bias toward the right side of human bodies. Consistent with our hypothesis, when presented with ambiguous stimuli depicting humans performing lateralized actions or movements, participants perceived a greater proportion of right-handed figures when the stimuli were shown upright than when the stimuli were shown inverted. The present findings seem to confirm our hypothesis that body configural information may include some form of knowledge about the probable handedness of other individuals, although alternative accounts involving the role of experience cannot be ruled out. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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