Infants' Processing of Featural and Configural Information in the Upper and Lower Halves of the Face.
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] Barbara A. Younger,et al. Infant perception of angular relations , 1984 .
[2] D. Hay,et al. Developmental changes in the recognition of faces and facial features. , 2000 .
[3] A. G. Goldstein,et al. Recognition of human faces from isolated facial features: A developmental study , 1966 .
[4] J. G. Bremner,et al. Form perception at birth: Cohen and Younger (1984) revisited. , 1991, Journal of experimental child psychology.
[5] G. Rhodes,et al. Holistic Processing of Faces in Preschool Children and Adults , 2003, Psychological science.
[6] K. Durand,et al. Qualitative differences in the exploration of upright and upside-down faces in four-month-old infants: an eye-movement study. , 2006, Child development.
[7] C. Umilta,et al. Newborns’ preference for up–down asymmetrical configurations , 2002 .
[8] M. Farah,et al. Parts and Wholes in Face Recognition , 1993, The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology. A, Human experimental psychology.
[9] J. M. Serrano,et al. Visual discrimination and recognition of facial expressions of anger, fear, and surprise in 4- to 6-month-old infants. , 1992, Developmental psychobiology.
[10] D W Massaro,et al. Modeling face identification processing in children and adults. , 2001, Journal of experimental child psychology.
[11] Margot J. Taylor,et al. Eyes first! Eye processing develops before face processing in children , 2001, Neuroreport.
[12] Leslie B. Cohen,et al. Beyond U-Shaped Development in Infants' Processing of Faces: An Information-Processing Account , 2004 .
[13] Mark H. Johnson,et al. Biology and Cognitive Development: The Case of Face Recognition , 1993 .
[14] A. Freire,et al. The Face-Inversion Effect as a Deficit in the Encoding of Configural Information: Direct Evidence , 2000, Perception.
[15] Paul C Quinn,et al. Development of Form Similarity as a Gestalt Grouping Principle in Infancy , 2002, Psychological science.
[16] D. Maurer,et al. Configural Face Processing Develops more Slowly than Featural Face Processing , 2002, Perception.
[17] D. Maurer,et al. The many faces of configural processing , 2002, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.
[18] Gillian Rhodes,et al. Are preschoolers sensitive to configural information in faces? , 2006, Developmental science.
[19] Cindy M. Bukach,et al. Preservation of mouth region processing in two cases of prosopagnosia. , 2008, Journal of neuropsychology.
[20] L. Thompson,et al. Infants attend to second-order relational properties of faces , 2001, Psychonomic bulletin & review.
[21] Mark H. Johnson,et al. Eye contact detection in humans from birth , 2002, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[22] Mark H. Johnson,et al. Newborns' preferential tracking of face-like stimuli and its subsequent decline , 1991, Cognition.
[23] Alan Slater,et al. The development of face processing in infancy and early childhood: current perspectives , 2001 .
[24] N. Kanwisher,et al. Face perception: domain specific, not process specific. , 2004, Neuron.
[25] M. Haith,et al. Eye contact and face scanning in early infancy , 1977, Science.
[26] Frédéric Gosselin,et al. Spatio-temporal dynamics of face recognition in a flash: it's in the eyes , 2004, Cogn. Sci..
[27] S. Carey,et al. Why faces are and are not special: an effect of expertise. , 1986 .
[28] George L. Malcolm,et al. Regional Variation in the Inversion Effect for Faces: Differential Effects for Feature Shape, Feature Configuration, and External Contour , 2004, Perception.
[29] D. Maurer,et al. Developmental changes in the scanning of faces by young infants. , 1976, Child development.
[30] Zsuzsa Kaldy,et al. A new method for calibrating perceptual salience across dimensions in infants: the case of color vs. luminance. , 2006, Developmental science.
[31] Garrison W. Cottrell,et al. When Holistic Processing is Not Enough: Local Features Save the Day , 2004 .
[32] Otto H. MacLin,et al. Figural aftereffects in the perception of faces , 1999, Psychonomic bulletin & review.
[33] P. Bennett,et al. Inversion Leads to Quantitative, Not Qualitative, Changes in Face Processing , 2004, Current Biology.
[34] R. Bhatt,et al. Face processing in infancy: developmental changes in the use of different kinds of relational information. , 2005, Child development.
[35] J. Fagan. Memory in the infant. , 1970, Journal of experimental child psychology.
[36] M. Riesenhuber,et al. Face processing in humans is compatible with a simple shape–based model of vision , 2004, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences.
[37] C. Nelson,et al. The generalized discrimination of facial expressions by seven-month-old infants. , 1985, Child development.
[38] C. Izard,et al. Four- and six-month-old infants' visual responses to joy, anger, and neutral expressions. , 1976, Child development.
[39] G. J. Walker-Smith,et al. The effects of delay and exposure duration in a face recognition task , 1978 .
[40] G. Schwarzer,et al. Evidence of a shift from featural to configural face processing in infancy. , 2007, Developmental science.
[41] J. Sergent. An investigation into component and configural processes underlying face perception. , 1984, British journal of psychology.
[42] V. Bruce,et al. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A: Human Experimental Psychology When Inverted Faces Are Recognized: the Role of Configural Information in Face Recognition , 2022 .
[43] K. D. De Valois,et al. Stimulus selectivity of figural aftereffects for faces. , 2005, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.
[44] Leslie B. Cohen,et al. Chapter 5 – Infant Visual Memory1 , 1975 .
[45] Irene Leo,et al. Face processing at birth: a Thatcher illusion study. , 2009, Developmental science.