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  1. Patterns of Eye Movements When Observers Judge Female Facial Attractiveness.Yan Zhang, Xiaoying Wang, Juan Wang, Lili Zhang & Yu Xiang - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  • Gaze Patterns in Auditory-Visual Perception of Emotion by Children with Hearing Aids and Hearing Children.Yifang Wang, Wei Zhou, Yanhong Cheng & Xiaoying Bian - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8:267013.
    This study investigated eye-movement patterns during emotion perception for children with hearing aids and hearing children. Seventy-eight participants aged from 3 to 7 were asked to watch videos with a facial expression followed by an oral statement, and these two cues were either consistent or inconsistent in emotional valence. Results showed that while normal-hearing children paid more attention to the upper part of the face, children with hearing aids paid more attention to the lower face after the oral statement was (...)
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  • An other-race effect for configural and featural processing of faces: upper and lower face regions play different roles.Zhe Wang, Paul C. Quinn, James W. Tanaka, Xiaoyang Yu, Yu-Hao P. Sun, Jiangang Liu, Olivier Pascalis, Liezhong Ge & Kang Lee - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  • Greater reliance on the eye region predicts better face recognition ability.Jessica Royer, Caroline Blais, Isabelle Charbonneau, Karine Déry, Jessica Tardif, Brad Duchaine, Frédéric Gosselin & Daniel Fiset - 2018 - Cognition 181 (C):12-20.
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  • Classification Videos Reveal the Visual Information Driving Complex Real-World Speeded Decisions.Sepehr Jalali, Sian E. Martin, Colm P. Murphy, Joshua A. Solomon & Kielan Yarrow - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  • Sad people are more accurate at face recognition than happy people.Peter J. Hills, Magda A. Werno & Michael B. Lewis - 2011 - Consciousness and Cognition 20 (4):1502-1517.
    Mood has varied effects on cognitive performance including the accuracy of face recognition . Three experiments are presented here that explored face recognition abilities in mood-induced participants. Experiment 1 demonstrated that happy-induced participants are less accurate and have a more conservative response bias than sad-induced participants in a face recognition task. Using a remember/know/guess procedure, Experiment 2 showed that sad-induced participants had more conscious recollections of faces than happy-induced participants. Additionally, sad-induced participants could recognise all faces accurately, whereas, happy- and (...)
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  • Object expectations alter information use during visual recognition.Laurent Caplette, Frédéric Gosselin & Greg L. West - 2021 - Cognition 214 (C):104803.
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  • Human visual processing oscillates: Evidence from a classification image technique.Caroline Blais, Martin Arguin & Frédéric Gosselin - 2013 - Cognition 128 (3):353-362.
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  • Distinct Contributions to Facial Emotion Perception of Foveated versus Nonfoveated Facial Features.Anthony P. Atkinson & Hannah E. Smithson - 2013 - Emotion Review 5 (1):30-35.
    Foveated stimuli receive visual processing that is quantitatively and qualitatively different from nonfoveated stimuli. At normal interpersonal distances, people move their eyes around another’s face so that certain features receive foveal processing; on any given fixation, other features therefore project extrafoveally. Yet little is known about the processing of extrafoveally presented facial features, how informative those extrafoveally presented features are for face perception (e.g., for assessing another’s emotion), or what processes extract task-relevant (e.g., emotion-related) cues from facial features that first (...)
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