Pages that link to "Q52022272"
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The following pages link to Race as a visual feature: using visual search and perceptual discrimination tasks to understand face categories and the cross-race recognition deficit (Q52022272):
Displaying 50 items.
- Neural repetition suppression to identity is abolished by other-race faces (Q24633732) (← links)
- Racial ingroup and outgroup attention biases revealed by event-related brain potentials (Q24651022) (← links)
- New "golden" ratios for facial beauty (Q24655329) (← links)
- Perceptions of race (Q28190484) (← links)
- Looking at faces from different angles: Europeans fixate different features in Asian and Caucasian faces (Q29035776) (← links)
- Deficits in cross-race face learning: Insights from eye movements and pupillometry (Q29307365) (← links)
- Slithering snakes, angry men and out-group members: what and whom are we evolved to fear? (Q30223172) (← links)
- A mechanistic approach to cross-domain perceptual narrowing in the first year of life (Q30422286) (← links)
- Perceptual discrimination difficulty and familiarity in the Uncanny Valley: more like a "Happy Valley". (Q30423609) (← links)
- Do neural correlates of face expertise vary with task demands? Event-related potential correlates of own- and other-race face inversion. (Q30444704) (← links)
- Category Processing and the human likeness dimension of the Uncanny Valley Hypothesis: Eye-Tracking Data (Q30597089) (← links)
- Arousal, valence, and the uncanny valley: psychophysiological and self-report findings (Q30657741) (← links)
- Perceptual other-race training reduces implicit racial bias (Q33401268) (← links)
- Attentional prioritization of infant faces is limited to own-race infants (Q33687104) (← links)
- Human face recognition ability is specific and highly heritable (Q33740129) (← links)
- Deficits in other-race face recognition: no evidence for encoding-based effects (Q33844641) (← links)
- Putting a face in its place: in- and out-group membership alters the N170 response (Q33878216) (← links)
- A multidimensional scaling analysis of own- and cross-race face spaces (Q33976899) (← links)
- Differential responses in the fusiform region to same-race and other-race faces (Q34085352) (← links)
- On the other side of the fence: effects of social categorization and spatial grouping on memory and attention for own-race and other-race faces (Q34122202) (← links)
- The role of face shape and pigmentation in other-race face perception: an electrophysiological study (Q34162035) (← links)
- The neural correlates of memory encoding and recognition for own-race and other-race faces (Q34205306) (← links)
- An encoding advantage for own-race versus other-race faces (Q34280412) (← links)
- Individual differences in holistic processing predict the own-race advantage in recognition memory (Q34339777) (← links)
- A robust method of measuring other-race and other-ethnicity effects: the Cambridge Face Memory Test format (Q34464677) (← links)
- The processing of facial identity and expression is interactive, but dependent on task and experience (Q34511066) (← links)
- Seeing faces as objects: no face inversion effect with geometrical discrimination (Q34567820) (← links)
- Natural experience modulates the processing of older adult faces in young adults and 3-year-old children (Q34608636) (← links)
- The cross-category effect: mere social categorization is sufficient to elicit an own-group bias in face recognition (Q34660077) (← links)
- Why Some Faces won't be Remembered: Brain Potentials Illuminate Successful Versus Unsuccessful Encoding for Same-Race and Other-Race Faces. (Q34674883) (← links)
- Race-specific perceptual discrimination improvement following short individuation training with faces (Q34734295) (← links)
- Class, race, and the face: social context modulates the cross-race effect in face recognition (Q34739487) (← links)
- Oxytocin eliminates the own-race bias in face recognition memory (Q35031563) (← links)
- Sequential effects in judgements of attractiveness: the influences of face race and sex. (Q35070075) (← links)
- Neural correlates of the in-group memory advantage on the encoding and recognition of faces (Q35072906) (← links)
- Electro-cortical implicit race bias does not vary with participants' race or sex (Q35303603) (← links)
- Korean facial emotion recognition tasks for schizophrenia research (Q35330591) (← links)
- Development of face processing (Q35461140) (← links)
- Minimizing Skin Color Differences Does Not Eliminate the Own-Race Recognition Advantage in Infants. (Q35461268) (← links)
- Cultural differences in affect intensity perception in the context of advertising (Q35536120) (← links)
- The other face of the other-race effect: An fMRI investigation of the other-race face categorization advantage (Q35564999) (← links)
- Shape, color and the other‐race effect in the infant brain (Q35576042) (← links)
- The role of features and configural processing in face-race classification (Q35577617) (← links)
- Face recognition in age related macular degeneration: perceived disability, measured disability, and performance with a bioptic device. (Q35590073) (← links)
- Own-race faces capture attention faster than other-race faces: evidence from response time and the N2pc (Q35652765) (← links)
- "We all look the same to me": positive emotions eliminate the own-race in face recognition (Q35659860) (← links)
- The effect of context on responses to racially ambiguous faces: changes in perception and evaluation (Q35790437) (← links)
- Neural Trade-Offs between Recognizing and Categorizing Own- and Other-Race Faces (Q35826112) (← links)
- Cross-age effects on forensic face construction (Q35978700) (← links)
- Bayesian face recognition and perceptual narrowing in face-space (Q36060261) (← links)