Perception of Faces, Objects, and Scenes: Analytic and Holistic Processes (335-355)

Introduction: Analytic and holistic processing - The view through different lenses 1. What are the routes to face recognition? 2. The holistic representation of faces 3. When is a face, not a face? The effects of misorientation on mechanisms of face perception 4. Isolating holistic processing in faces (and perhaps objects) 5. Diagnostic use of scale information for componential and holistic recognition 6. Image-based recognition of biological motion, scenes and objects 7. Visual object recognition: Can a single mechanism suffice? 8. The complementary properties of holistic and analytical representations of shape 9. Relative dominance of holistic and component properties in the perceptual organization of visual objects 10. Overlapping partial configurations in object memory: An alternative solution to classic problems in perception and recognition 11. Neuropsychological approaches to perceptual organization: Evidence from visual agnosia 12. Scene perception: What we can learn from visual integration and change detection 13. Eye movements, visual memory and scene representation