Search results for "Holistic processing"

showing 5 items of 5 documents

The time course of face matching by internal and external features: Effects of context and inversion.

2010

AbstractEffects of context and inversion were studied in face matching tasks by measuring proportion correct as a function of exposure duration. Subjects were instructed to attend either internal features (task A) or external features (task B) and matched two consecutive face stimuli, which included either congruent, incongruent, or no facial context features. In congruent contexts matching performance rose fast and took very similar courses for both types of facial features. With no contexts internal and external features were found to be matched at an equal speed, while incongruent contexts seriously delayed matching performance for internal, but not for external features. Analysing the e…

Holistic processingMaleMatching (statistics)Visual perceptionFace perceptionContext (language use)Face inversion effect050105 experimental psychology03 medical and health sciencesInversion (linguistics)0302 clinical medicineDiscrimination PsychologicalFace perceptionHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesContext effect05 social sciencesInformation processingRecognition PsychologySensory SystemsOphthalmologyFeature (computer vision)FaceVisual PerceptionFemalePsychologySocial psychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryInternal and external featuresCognitive psychologyVision research
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Does Holistic Processing Require a Large Brain? Insights From Honeybees and Wasps in Fine Visual Recognition Tasks

2018

The expertise of humans for recognizing faces is largely based on holistic processing mechanism, a sophisticated cognitive process that develops with visual experience. The various visual features of a face are thus glued together and treated by the brain as a unique stimulus, facilitating robust recognition. Holistic processing is known to facilitate fine discrimination of highly similar visual stimuli, and involves specialized brain areas in humans and other primates. Although holistic processing is most typically employed with face stimuli, subjects can also learn to apply similar image analysis mechanisms when gaining expertise in discriminating novel visual objects, like becoming exper…

lcsh:Psychologyhierarchical stimulihymenopteranslcsh:BF1-990Apis melliferaholistic processingconfigural processingface recognitionFrontiers in Psychology
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Developmental changes in the microgenesis of face perception revealed by effects of context and inversion

2011

AbstractPresent studies on the development of face perception mechanisms are ambiguous about the question of whether holistic face vision arises early, or in the second decade of life (Crookes & McKone, 2009). Measuring the time course of face matching we assess effects of context and inversion as correlates of holistic processing in the microgenesis of face perception within the first 650ms, and compare among 8- to 10-year-old children and adults. Results for adults indicate dominance of holistic viewing at brief timings, which is gradually replaced by feature selective strategies enabling them to selectively attend either internal or external features, as demanded by instruction. For chil…

MaleHolistic processingFace perceptionFace matchingFace inversion effect2809 Sensory SystemsChild DevelopmentDiscrimination PsychologicalFace perceptionHumansContextual informationChild10093 Institute of PsychologyInformation processingRecognition PsychologyInversion (meteorology)2731 OphthalmologySensory SystemsOphthalmologyFaceTime courseVisual PerceptionFemale150 PsychologyPsychologySocial psychologyInternal and external featuresCognitive psychologyVision Research
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Does Holistic Processing Require a Large Brain? Insights From Honeybees and Wasps in Fine Visual Recognition Tasks

2018

International audience

[SCCO]Cognitive science[SCCO.NEUR]Cognitive science/Neuroscience[SDV.BA]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Animal biology[SCCO.PSYC]Cognitive science/PsychologyComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSApis mellifera; configural processing; face recognition; hierarchical stimuli; holistic processing; hymenopterans; Vespula vulgaris; visual cognition
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Does Holistic Processing Require a Large Brain? Insights From Honeybees and Wasps in Fine Visual Recognition Tasks.

2018

The expertise of humans for recognizing faces is largely based on holistic processing mechanism, a sophisticated cognitive process that develops with visual experience. The various visual features of a face are thus glued together and treated by the brain as a unique stimulus, facilitating robust recognition. Holistic processing is known to facilitate fine discrimination of highly similar visual stimuli, and involves specialized brain areas in humans and other primates. Although holistic processing is most typically employed with face stimuli, subjects can also learn to apply similar image analysis mechanisms when gaining expertise in discriminating novel visual objects, like becoming exper…

Vespula vulgarishierarchical stimulihymenopteransPsychologyApis melliferaholistic processingconfigural processingOriginal Researchface recognitionvisual cognitionFrontiers in psychology
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