Chinese characters elicit face-like N170 inversion effects
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] R. C. Oldfield. The assessment and analysis of handedness: the Edinburgh inventory. , 1971, Neuropsychologia.
[2] N. Sagiv,et al. Structural Encoding of Human and Schematic Faces: Holistic and Part-Based Processes , 2001, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
[3] J. Knott,et al. Regarding the American Electroencephalographic Society guidelines for standard electrode position nomenclature: a commentary on the proposal to change the 10-20 electrode designators. , 1993, Journal of clinical neurophysiology : official publication of the American Electroencephalographic Society.
[4] A. L. Humphrey,et al. Kernel- and model-based predictions of grating responses in monkey and cat visual cortex , 2004 .
[5] C C Wood,et al. Letter: The epsilon-adjustment procedure for repeated-measures analyses of variance. , 1976, Psychophysiology.
[6] M. Tarr,et al. Expertise Training with Novel Objects Leads to Left-Lateralized Facelike Electrophysiological Responses , 2002, Psychological science.
[7] Henry S.R. Kao,et al. Cognitive Neuroscience Studies of the Chinese Language , 2002 .
[8] F. Chua. Phonological recoding in Chinese logograph recognition. , 1999 .
[9] M. Tarr,et al. The N170 occipito‐temporal component is delayed and enhanced to inverted faces but not to inverted objects: an electrophysiological account of face‐specific processes in the human brain , 2000, Neuroreport.
[10] Anthony Randal McIntosh,et al. Early Face Processing Specificity: It's in the Eyes! , 2007, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
[11] Matthias Dümpelmann,et al. The effect of face inversion on intracranial and scalp recordings of event-related potentials. , 2010, Psychophysiology.
[12] F. Pulvermüller,et al. Effects of word length and frequency on the human event-related potential , 2004, Clinical Neurophysiology.
[13] S. Carey,et al. Why faces are and are not special: an effect of expertise. , 1986, Journal of experimental psychology. General.
[14] M. Tarr,et al. Becoming a “Greeble” Expert: Exploring Mechanisms for Face Recognition , 1997, Vision Research.
[15] Roxane J. Itier,et al. Face, eye and object early processing: What is the face specificity? , 2006, NeuroImage.
[16] Margot J. Taylor,et al. N170 or N1? Spatiotemporal differences between object and face processing using ERPs. , 2004, Cerebral cortex.
[17] Isabel Gauthier,et al. An early electrophysiological response associated with expertise in letter perception , 2005, Cognitive, affective & behavioral neuroscience.
[18] H. Lüders,et al. American Electroencephalographic Society Guidelines for Standard Electrode Position Nomenclature , 1991, Journal of clinical neurophysiology : official publication of the American Electroencephalographic Society.
[19] A. Puce,et al. The spatiotemporal dynamics of the face inversion effect: A magneto- and electro-encephalographic study , 2003, Neuroscience.
[20] Man-Ying Wang. THE NATURE OF CHARACTER-COMPONENT INTERACTION IN CHINESE CHARACTER PERCEPTION , 2002 .
[21] Su-Ling Yeh,et al. Do "Chinese and American see opposite apparent motions in a Chinese character"? Tse and Cavanagh (2000) replicated and revised , 2003 .
[22] Phillip J. Holcomb,et al. Phonological Processing in Visual Rhyming: A Developmental ERP Study , 2001, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
[23] I. Gauthier,et al. A defense of the subordinate-level expertise account for the N170 component , 2002, Cognition.
[24] S. Yeh,et al. Role of structure and component in judgments of visual similarity of Chinese characters. , 2002, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.
[25] Margot J. Taylor,et al. Inversion and Contrast Polarity Reversal Affect both Encoding and Recognition Processes of Unfamiliar Faces: A Repetition Study Using ERPs , 2002, NeuroImage.
[26] M. Tarr,et al. Visual object recognition: do we know more now than we did 20 years ago? , 2007, Annual review of psychology.
[27] C. Jacques,et al. Misaligning face halves increases and delays the N170 specifically for upright faces: Implications for the nature of early face representations , 2010, Brain Research.
[28] Michèle Fabre-Thorpe,et al. Spotting animals in natural scenes: efficiency of humans and monkeys at very low contrasts , 2010, Animal Cognition.
[29] Man-Ying Wang,et al. From Unit to Gestalt: Perceptual Dynamics in Recognizing Chinese Characters , 1992 .
[30] Boris Suchan,et al. Losing your Head: Behavioral and Electrophysiological Effects of Body Inversion , 2009, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
[31] J. Pernier,et al. ERP Manifestations of Processing Printed Words at Different Psycholinguistic Levels: Time Course and Scalp Distribution , 1999, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
[32] T. Busey,et al. Behavioral and electrophysiological evidence for configural processing in fingerprint experts , 2005, Vision Research.
[33] S. Yeh,et al. The perceptual dimensions underlying the classification of the shapes of Chinese characters. , 1997 .
[34] Janet Hui-wen Hsiao,et al. Neural correlates of foveal splitting in reading: Evidence from an ERP study of Chinese character recognition , 2007, Neuropsychologia.
[35] J. Davidoff,et al. Brain events related to normal and moderately scrambled faces. , 1996, Brain research. Cognitive brain research.
[36] Bruno Rossion,et al. Early electrophysiological responses to multiple face orientations correlate with individual discrimination performance in humans , 2007, NeuroImage.
[37] Bruno Rossion,et al. Early lateralization and orientation tuning for face, word, and object processing in the visual cortex , 2003, NeuroImage.
[38] A. Parkin,et al. Cerebral Lateralisation at Different Stages of Facial Processing , 1987, Cortex.
[39] T. Allison,et al. Electrophysiological Studies of Face Perception in Humans , 1996, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
[40] T. Takeuchi,et al. The role of learning experience on the perceptual organization of Chinese characters , 2003 .
[41] Michèle Fabre-Thorpe,et al. Animal and human faces in natural scenes: How specific to human faces is the N170 ERP component? , 2004, Journal of vision.
[42] L. Deouell,et al. STRUCTURAL ENCODING AND IDENTIFICATION IN FACE PROCESSING: ERP EVIDENCE FOR SEPARATE MECHANISMS , 2000, Cognitive neuropsychology.
[43] C. Joyce,et al. The face-sensitive N170 and VPP components manifest the same brain processes: The effect of reference electrode site , 2005, Clinical Neurophysiology.
[44] Man-Ying Wang,et al. Recognition intent and visual word recognition , 2009, Consciousness and Cognition.
[45] Blake W. Johnson,et al. Non-identical neural mechanisms for two types of mental transformation: event-related potentials during mental rotation and mental paper folding , 2003, Neuropsychologia.
[46] R. Yin. Looking at Upside-down Faces , 1969 .
[47] T. Valentine. Upside-down faces: a review of the effect of inversion upon face recognition. , 1988, British journal of psychology.
[48] V. Goffaux,et al. Spatio-temporal localization of the face inversion effect: an event-related potentials study , 1999, Biological Psychology.
[49] Mohamed Rebaï,et al. Familiarity and emotional expression influence an early stage of face processing: An electrophysiological study , 2005, Brain and Cognition.
[50] Jia Liu,et al. Perception of Face Parts and Face Configurations: An fMRI Study , 2010, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
[51] Bruno Rossion,et al. Does physical interstimulus variance account for early electrophysiological face sensitive responses in the human brain? Ten lessons on the N170 , 2008, NeuroImage.
[52] Bruno Rossion,et al. Category Specificity in Early Perception: Face and Word N170 Responses Differ in Both Lateralization and Habituation Properties , 2008, Frontiers in human neuroscience.
[53] O. Koenig,et al. Separable Mechanisms in Face Processing: Evidence from Hemispheric Specialization , 1991, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
[54] I. Biederman. Recognition-by-components: a theory of human image understanding. , 1987, Psychological review.
[55] M. Taft,et al. The nature of the mental representation of radicals in Chinese: a priming study. , 2004, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.
[56] Joseph Dien,et al. The neurocognitive basis of reading single words as seen through early latency ERPs: A model of converging pathways , 2009, Biological Psychology.
[57] Janet Hui-wen Hsiao,et al. Analysis of a Chinese Phonetic Compound Database: Implications for Orthographic Processing , 2006, Journal of psycholinguistic research.
[58] I. Gauthier,et al. How does the brain process upright and inverted faces? , 2002, Behavioral and cognitive neuroscience reviews.
[59] C. C. Wood,et al. Scalp distributions of event-related potentials: an ambiguity associated with analysis of variance models. , 1985, Electroencephalography and clinical neurophysiology.
[60] J. Fiez,et al. Assimilation and accommodation patterns in ventral occipitotemporal cortex in learning a second writing system , 2009, Human brain mapping.
[61] Chia-Ying Lee,et al. Orthographic combinability and phonological consistency effects in reading Chinese phonograms: An event-related potential study , 2009, Brain and Language.
[62] M. Farah,et al. The inverted face inversion effect in prosopagnosia: Evidence for mandatory, face-specific perceptual mechanisms , 1995, Vision Research.
[63] P. Tse,et al. Chinese and Americans see opposite apparent motions in a Chinese character , 2000, Cognition.
[64] Hyun Wook Park,et al. Spatiotemporal brain activation pattern during word/picture perception by native Koreans , 2004, Neuroreport.
[65] C. C. Wood,et al. The ɛ-Adjustment Procedure for Repeated-Measures Analyses of Variance , 1976 .
[66] S. Thorpe,et al. Speed of processing in the human visual system , 1996, Nature.
[67] 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 .
[68] K. Bötzel,et al. Scalp topography and analysis of intracranial sources of face-evoked potentials , 2004, Experimental Brain Research.
[69] L. Weiskrantz,et al. Thought Without Language , 1988 .
[70] Frederic Dick,et al. Differential Lateralization for Words and Faces: Category or Psychophysics? , 2008, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
[71] P. Fox,et al. Neuroanatomical correlates of phonological processing of Chinese characters and alphabetic words: A meta‐analysis , 2005, Human brain mapping.
[72] G. Rousselet,et al. Animal and human faces in natural scenes: How specific to human faces is the N170 ERP component? , 2004, Journal of vision.
[73] T. Sejnowski,et al. Brain and cognition , 1989 .
[74] K. Linkenkaer-Hansen,et al. Face-selective processing in human extrastriate cortex around 120 ms after stimulus onset revealed by magneto- and electroencephalography , 1998, Neuroscience Letters.
[75] D. Jeffreys. A face-responsive potential recorded from the human scalp , 2004, Experimental Brain Research.
[76] Susan M. Letourneau,et al. Behavioral and ERP measures of holistic face processing in a composite task , 2008, Brain and Cognition.
[77] Jie Tian,et al. Similarities in neural activations of face and Chinese character discrimination , 2009, Neuroreport.
[78] Maria Pia Viggiano,et al. Interplay between familiarity and orientation in face processing: an ERP study. , 2007, International journal of psychophysiology : official journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology.
[79] S Lehéricy,et al. The visual word form area: spatial and temporal characterization of an initial stage of reading in normal subjects and posterior split-brain patients. , 2000, Brain : a journal of neurology.
[80] D. Maurer,et al. The many faces of configural processing , 2002, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.
[81] D. Jeffreys,et al. The influence of stimulus orientation on the vertex positive scalp potential evoked by faces , 1993, Experimental Brain Research.