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Sunday, Mackenzie A.; Donnelly, Edwin; Gauthier, Isabel – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2018
Recent work suggests that some aspects of lung nodule detection ability may relate to object recognition ability. However, this work only sampled radiological novices. Here, we further investigate whether object recognition ability predicts lung nodule detection ability (as measured by the Vanderbilt Chest Radiograph Test or VCRT), after…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Recognition (Psychology), Radiology, Tests
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Chua, Kao-Wei; Bub, Daniel N.; Masson, Michael E. J.; Gauthier, Isabel – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2018
Seeing pictures of objects activates the motor cortex and can have an influence on subsequent grasping actions. However, the exact nature of the motor representations evoked by these pictures is unclear. For example, action plans engaged by pictures could be most affected by direct visual input and computed online based on object shape.…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Recognition (Psychology), Comprehension, Attention
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Folstein, Jonathan R.; Gauthier, Isabel; Palmeri, Thomas J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2012
How does learning to categorize objects affect how people visually perceive them? Behavioral, neurophysiological, and neuroimaging studies have tested the degree to which category learning influences object representations, with conflicting results. Some studies have found that objects become more visually discriminable along dimensions relevant…
Descriptors: Classification, Visual Perception, Context Effect, Neurosciences
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Wong, Yetta K.; Folstein, Jonathan R.; Gauthier, Isabel – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2012
Visual perceptual learning (PL) and perceptual expertise (PE) traditionally lead to different training effects and recruit different brain areas, but reasons for these differences are largely unknown. Here, we tested how the learning history influences visual object representations. Two groups were trained with tasks typically used in PL or PE…
Descriptors: Testing, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension), Visual Stimuli, Infants
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McKeeff, Thomas J.; McGugin, Rankin W.; Tong, Frank; Gauthier, Isabel – Cognition, 2010
Recent studies indicate that expertise with objects can interfere with face processing. Although competition occurs between faces and objects of expertise, it remains unclear whether this reflects an expertise-specific bottleneck or the fact that objects of expertise grab attention and thereby consume more central resources. We investigated the…
Descriptors: Motor Vehicles, Expertise, Cognitive Processes, Recognition (Psychology)
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Wong, Yetta Kwailing; Gauthier, Isabel – Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2010
Prior neuroimaging work on visual perceptual expertise has focused on changes in the visual system, ignoring possible effects of acquiring expert visual skills in nonvisual areas. We investigated expertise for reading musical notation, a skill likely to be associated with multimodal abilities. We compared brain activity in music-reading experts…
Descriptors: Music, Music Reading, Expertise, Visual Perception
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Cheung, Olivia S.; Gauthier, Isabel – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2010
Faces and objects of expertise compete for early perceptual processes and holistic processing resources (Gauthier, Curran, Curby, & Collins, 2003). Here, we examined the nature of interference on holistic face processing in working memory by comparing how various types of loads affect selective attention to parts of face composites. In dual…
Descriptors: Attention, Short Term Memory, Cognitive Processes, Experimental Psychology
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Richler, Jennifer J.; Tanaka, James W.; Brown, Danielle D.; Gauthier, Isabel – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2008
One hallmark of holistic face processing is an inability to selectively attend to 1 face part while ignoring information in another part. In 3 sequential matching experiments, the authors tested perceptual and decisional accounts of holistic processing by measuring congruency effects between cued and uncued composite face halves shown in spatially…
Descriptors: Attention, Visual Perception, Cognitive Processes, Human Body
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James, Karin H.; Gauthier, Isabel – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2009
The effect of writing on the concurrent visual perception of letters was investigated in a series of studies using an interference paradigm. Participants drew shapes and letters while simultaneously visually identifying letters and shapes embedded in noise. Experiments 1-3 demonstrated that letter perception, but not the perception of shapes, was…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Reading Writing Relationship, Acoustics, Task Analysis
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Cheung, Olivia S.; Richler, Jennifer J.; Palmeri, Thomas J.; Gauthier, Isabel – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2008
V. Goffaux and B. Rossion (2006) argued that holistic processing of faces is largely supported by low spatial frequencies (LSFs) but less so by high spatial frequencies (HSFs). We addressed this claim using a sequential matching task with face composites. Observers judged whether the top halves of aligned or misaligned composites were identical.…
Descriptors: Holistic Approach, Visual Perception, Visual Stimuli, Response Style (Tests)
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Richler, Jennifer J.; Gauthier, Isabel; Wenger, Michael J.; Palmeri, Thomas J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2008
Researchers have used several composite face paradigms to assess holistic processing of faces. In the selective attention paradigm, participants decide whether one face part (e.g., top) is the same as a previously seen face part. Their judgment is affected by whether the irrelevant part of the test face is the same as or different than the…
Descriptors: Models, Attention, Identification (Psychology), Tests
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Gauthier, Isabel; Bukach, Cindy – Cognition, 2007
On the basis of a review of the literature and the results of three experiments with dog experts, Robbins and McKone [Robbins, R. A., & McKone, E. (2006). No face-like processing for objects-of-expertise in three behavioural tasks, "Cognition"] argue that there is little or no evidence supporting an expertise account of the differences in…
Descriptors: Statistical Analysis, Cognitive Processes, Research Methodology, Visual Perception