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Robbins, Rachel A.; Coltheart, Max – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2012
Extensive research has focused on face recognition, and much is known about this topic. However, much of this work seems to be based on an assumption that faces are the most important aspect of person recognition. Here we test this assumption in two experiments. We show that when viewers are forced to choose, they "do" use the face more than the…
Descriptors: Evidence, Familiarity, Cues, Visual Perception
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Risse, Sarah; Kliegl, Reinhold – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2012
During reading information is acquired from word(s) beyond the word that is currently looked at. It is still an open question whether such parafoveal information can influence the current viewing of a word, and if so, whether such parafoveal-on-foveal effects are attributable to distributed processing or to mislocated fixations which occur when…
Descriptors: Evidence, Familiarity, Word Frequency, Reading
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Carbon, Claus-Christian; Ditye, Thomas – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2011
Figural aftereffects are commonly believed to be transient and to fade away in the course of milliseconds. We tested face aftereffects using familiar faces and found sustained effects lasting up to 1 week. In 3 experiments, participants were first exposed to distorted pictures of famous persons and then had to select the veridical face in a…
Descriptors: Brain, Visual Perception, Perception, Human Body
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Sui, Jie; He, Xun; Humphreys, Glyn W. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2012
We present novel evidence showing that new self-relevant visual associations can affect performance in simple shape recognition tasks. Participants associated labels for themselves, other people, or neutral terms with geometric shapes and then immediately judged whether subsequent label-shape pairings were matched. Across 4 experiments there was a…
Descriptors: Geometric Concepts, Semantics, Association (Psychology), Stimuli
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Otsuka, Yumiko; Konishi, Yukuo; Kanazawa, So; Yamaguchi, Masami K. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2009
Previous psychophysical studies have shown that the adult human visual system makes use of form information such as occlusion to determine whether to integrate or segregate local motion signals (J. McDermott, Y. Weiss, & E. H. Adelson, 2001). Using the displays developed by McDermott et al., these experiments examined whether occlusion and amodal…
Descriptors: Infants, Motion, Visual Perception, Age Differences
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Peterson, Mary A.; Skow, Emily – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2008
Theories of figure-ground perception entail inhibitory competition between either low-level units (edge or feature units) or high-level shape properties. Extant computational models instantiate the 1st type of theory. The authors investigated a prediction of the 2nd type of theory: that shape properties suggested on the ground side of an edge are…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Competition, Cues, Familiarity
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Loschky, Lester C.; Sethi, Amit; Simons, Daniel J.; Pydimarri, Tejaswi N.; Ochs, Daniel; Corbeille, Jeremy L. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2007
People can recognize the meaning or gist of a scene from a single glance, and a few recent studies have begun to examine the sorts of information that contribute to scene gist recognition. The authors of the present study used visual masking coupled with image manipulations (randomizing phase while maintaining the Fourier amplitude spectrum;…
Descriptors: Familiarity, Memory, Recognition (Psychology), Visual Perception
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Becker, Mark W.; Pashler, Harold; Lubin, Jeffrey – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2007
The authors investigated whether anomalous information in the periphery of a scene attracts saccades when the anomaly is not distinctive in its low-level visual properties. Subjects viewed color photographs for 8 s while their eye movements were monitored. Each subject saw 2 photographs of different scenes. One photograph was a control scene in…
Descriptors: Photography, Eye Movements, Visual Aids, Familiarity
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Granrud, Carl E. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2006
This study tested whether 4-month-old infants respond primarily to objects' physical or retinal image sizes. In the study's main experiment, infants were habituated to either a 6-cm-diameter disk at a distance of 18 cm or a 10-cm disk at 50 cm. They were then given 2 test trials in which the 6- and 10-cm disks were presented side by side at a…
Descriptors: Infants, Familiarity, Visual Perception, Visual Stimuli