All Stories

  1. Personal familiarity of faces, animals, objects, and scenes: Distinct perceptual and overlapping conceptual representations
  2. Beyond the face
  3. Face Perception
  4. Gaze and social attention
  5. Introduction
  6. Messages from facial movements
  7. Nature and nurture
  8. Recognising faces
  9. Social impressions
  10. The face
  11. The science and methods of face perception research
  12. When faces are not recognised
  13. A first impression of the future
  14. Understanding trait impressions from faces
  15. The roles of shape and texture in the recognition of familiar faces
  16. Familiarity is familiarity is familiarity: Event-related brain potentials reveal qualitatively similar representations of personally familiar and famous faces.
  17. Detecting a viewer’s familiarity with a face: Evidence from event‐related brain potentials and classifier analyses
  18. Predicting attractiveness from face parts reveals multiple covarying cues
  19. Trait evaluations of faces and voices: Comparing within- and between-person variability.
  20. The interplay between gaze cueing and facial trait impressions
  21. Face perception across the adult lifespan: evidence for age-related changes independent of general intelligence
  22. Insights from computational models of face recognition: A reply to Blauch, Behrmann and Plaut
  23. Consistent evidence of a link between Alexithymia and general intelligence
  24. Face and Voice Perception: Understanding Commonalities and Differences
  25. Emotion recognition ability: Evidence for a supramodal factor and its links to social cognition
  26. Facial identity across the lifespan
  27. Prediction-error signals to violated expectations about person identity and head orientation are doubly-dissociated across dorsal and ventral visual stream regions
  28. Perceptual integration and the composite face effect
  29. Later but not early stages of familiar face recognition depend strongly on attentional resources: Evidence from event-related brain potentials
  30. Understanding facial impressions between and within identities
  31. Do facial first impressions reflect a shared social reality?
  32. We need to talk about super‐recognizers : Invited commentary on: Ramon, M., Bobak, A. K., & White, D. Super‐recognizers: From the lab to the world and back again. British Journal of Psychology .
  33. Symmetrical Viewpoint Representations in Face-Selective Regions Convey an Advantage in the Perception and Recognition of Faces
  34. ELD revisited: A second look at a neuropsychological impairment of working memory affecting retention of visuo-spatial material
  35. A Robust Neural Index of High Face Familiarity
  36. Recognition of facial expression and identity in part reflects a common ability, independent of general intelligence and visual short-term memory
  37. Facial and self-report questionnaire measures capture different aspects of romantic partner preferences
  38. Individual differences in face identity processing
  39. Patterns of neural response in face regions are predicted by low-level image properties
  40. Sex differences in emotion recognition: Evidence for a small overall female superiority on facial disgust.
  41. Dose‐dependent modulation of the visually evoked N1/N170 by perceptual surprise: a clear demonstration of prediction‐error signalling
  42. Understanding face familiarity
  43. Are We Face Experts?
  44. Faces, people and the brain: The 45th Sir Frederic Bartlett Lecture
  45. Interaction between social categories in the composite face paradigm.
  46. Facial first impressions and partner preference models: Comparable or distinct underlying structures?
  47. Facial First Impressions Across Culture: Data-Driven Modeling of Chinese and British Perceivers’ Unconstrained Facial Impressions
  48. First Impressions of Faces
  49. “Functional architecture of visual emotion recognition ability: A latent variable approach”: Correction to Lewis, Lefevre, and Young (2016).
  50. The automaticity of face perception is influenced by familiarity
  51. Facial Image Manipulation
  52. Recognizing Faces
  53. Temporal and spatial localization of prediction-error signals in the visual brain
  54. Research on face recognition: The Aberdeen influence
  55. Robust social categorization emerges from learning the identities of very few faces.
  56. Face-selective regions show invariance to linear, but not to non-linear, changes in facial images
  57. Expectations about person identity modulate the face-sensitive N170
  58. Integrating social and facial models of person perception: Converging and diverging dimensions
  59. The neuropsychology of first impressions: Evidence from Huntington's disease
  60. Natural variability is essential to learning new faces
  61. An image-invariant neural response to familiar faces in the human medial temporal lobe
  62. Differences in holistic processing do not explain cultural differences in the recognition of facial expression
  63. Contributions of feature shapes and surface cues to the recognition and neural representation of facial identity
  64. Contributions of feature shapes and surface cues to the recognition of facial expressions
  65. Facial first impressions from another angle: How social judgements are influenced by changeable and invariant facial properties
  66. Cross-cultural differences and similarities underlying other-race effects for facial identity and expression
  67. Functional architecture of visual emotion recognition ability: A latent variable approach.
  68. Modelling the perceptual similarity of facial expressions from image statistics and neural responses
  69. Spatial properties of objects predict patterns of neural response in the ventral visual pathway
  70. Finding the clues
  71. Cultural similarities and differences in perceiving and recognizing facial expressions of basic emotions.
  72. Personality judgments from everyday images of faces
  73. Responses in the right posterior superior temporal sulcus show a feature-based response to facial expression
  74. Distinct but Overlapping Patterns of Response to Words and Faces in the Fusiform Gyrus
  75. Modelling verbal aggression, physical aggression and inappropriate sexual behaviour after acquired brain injury
  76. The importance of internal facial features in learning new faces
  77. The N170 observed ‘in the wild’: robust event-related potentials to faces in cluttered dynamic visual scenes
  78. Orientation-sensitivity to facial features explains the Thatcher illusion
  79. Face gender and stereotypicality influence facial trait evaluation: Counter-stereotypical female faces are negatively evaluated
  80. Brain regions involved in processing facial identity and expression are differentially selective for surface and edge information
  81. Modeling first impressions from highly variable facial images
  82. Dynamic stimuli demonstrate a categorical representation of facial expression in the amygdala
  83. The Thatcher Illusion Reveals Orientation Dependence in Brain Regions Involved in Processing Facial Expressions
  84. Social Judgement in Borderline Personality Disorder
  85. Neural responses to facial expressions support the role of the amygdala in processing threat
  86. Brain networks subserving the evaluation of static and dynamic facial expressions
  87. Involvement of Right STS in Audio-Visual Integration for Affective Speech Demonstrated Using MEG
  88. Clinical correlates of verbal aggression, physical aggression and inappropriate sexual behaviour after brain injury
  89. Altered Amygdala Connectivity Within the Social Brain in Schizophrenia
  90. Social inferences from faces: Ambient images generate a three-dimensional model
  91. Contrast negation and the importance of the eye region for holistic representations of facial identity.
  92. Social Cognition, the Male Brain and the Autism Spectrum
  93. Facial Stereotype Visualization Through Image Averaging
  94. Morphing between expressions dissociates continuous from categorical representations of facial expression in the human brain
  95. Neural Responses to Expression and Gaze in the Posterior Superior Temporal Sulcus Interact with Facial Identity
  96. Response of face-selective brain regions to trustworthiness and gender of faces
  97. When family looks strange and strangers look normal: A case of impaired face perception and recognition after stroke
  98. Vicarious Viewing Time: Prolonged Response Latencies for Sexually Attractive Targets as a Function of Task- or Stimulus-Specific Processing
  99. Understanding person perception
  100. Inferring social attributes from different face regions: Evidence for holistic processing
  101. The relation between anger and different forms of disgust: Implications for emotion recognition impairments in Huntington's disease
  102. Reproductive Hormones Modulate Cuteness Processing
  103. Viewing Time Effects Revisited: Prolonged Response Latencies for Sexually Attractive Targets Under Restricted Task Conditions
  104. Internal and External Features of the Face Are Represented Holistically in Face-Selective Regions of Visual Cortex
  105. Deficits in facial, body movement and vocal emotional processing in autism spectrum disorders
  106. Neural responses to rigidly moving faces displaying shifts in social attention investigated with fMRI and MEG
  107. MEG demonstrates a supra-additive response to facial and vocal emotion in the right superior temporal sulcus
  108. A common neural system mediating two different forms of social judgement
  109. The Cutest Little Baby Face
  110. Emotion recognition in faces and the use of visual context Vo in young people with high-functioning autism spectrum disorders
  111. An amygdala response to fearful faces with covered eyes
  112. Overactivation of Fear Systems to Neutral Faces in Schizophrenia
  113. Processing of faces and emotional expressions in infants at risk of social phobia
  114. Face perception: A very special issue
  115. Attentional capture by emotional stimuli is modulated by semantic processing.
  116. Differential effects of object-based attention on evoked potentials to fearful and disgusted faces
  117. Effects of Inversion and Negation on Social Inferences from Faces
  118. Learning faces from photographs.
  119. Conscious and nonconscious discrimination of facial expressions
  120. Prosopagnosia following nonconvulsive status epilepticus associated with a left fusiform gyrus malformation
  121. Recognition of emotion with temporal lobe epilepsy and asymmetrical amygdala damage
  122. Disgusting Smells Activate Human Anterior Insula and Ventral Striatum
  123. Disgust in pre-clinical Huntington's disease: A longitudinal study
  124. Transfer between two- and three-dimensional representations of faces
  125. Asymmetric interference between sex and emotion in face perception
  126. Priming of emotion recognition
  127. Understanding the recognition of facial identity and facial expression
  128. A differential pattern of neural response toward sad versus happy facial expressions in major depressive disorder
  129. Egocentric Disorientation following Bilateral Parietal Lobe Damage
  130. Exploring the perception of social characteristics in faces using the isolation effect
  131. Adaptation effects in facial expression recognition
  132. Social cognition and face processing in schizophrenia
  133. Emotion Perception from Dynamic and Static Body Expressions in Point-Light and Full-Light Displays
  134. Differential neural responses to overt and covert presentations of facial expressions of fear and disgust
  135. Mapping the time course of nonconscious and conscious perception of fear: An integration of central and peripheral measures
  136. Recognition Accuracy and Response Bias to Happy and Sad Facial Expressions in Patients With Major Depression.
  137. A preferential increase in the extrastriate response to signals of danger
  138. Dissociation of affective modulation of recollective and perceptual experience following amygdala damage
  139. Task instructions modulate neural responses to fearful facial expressions
  140. A case of paraprosopia and its treatment
  141. Acquired theory of mind impairments in individuals with bilateral amygdala lesions
  142. Facial expression recognition across the adult life span
  143. Facial expression recognition in people with medicated and unmedicated Parkinson’s disease
  144. Searching for threat
  145. Anxiety-related bias in the classification of emotionally ambiguous facial expressions.
  146. Face and emotion processing in frontal variant frontotemporal dementia
  147. Reading the mind from eye gaze
  148. The eyebrow frown: A salient social signal.
  149. Neuropsychology of fear and loathing
  150. A principal component analysis of facial expressions
  151. Time courses of left and right amygdalar responses to fearful facial expressions
  152. Impaired recognition and experience of disgust following brain injury
  153. Caricaturing facial expressions
  154. Wondrous Strange: The Neuropsychology of Abnormal Beliefs
  155. Configural information in facial expression perception.
  156. Dyspraxia in a patient with corticobasal degeneration: the role of visual and tactile inputs to action
  157. Recognition of facial emotion in nine individuals with bilateral amygdala damage
  158. LE, a person who lost her ‘mind's eye’
  159. The emotional impact of faces (but not names): Face specific changes in skin conductance responses to familiar and unfamiliar people
  160. SIMULATING FACE RECOGNITION: IMPLICATIONS FOR MODELLING COGNITION
  161. SIMULATION AND EXPLANATION: SOME HARMONY AND SOME DISCORD
  162. Neural responses to facial and vocal expressions of fear and disgust
  163. A neuromodulatory role for the human amygdala in processing emotional facial expressions
  164. Face processing impairments after encephalitis: amygdala damage and recognition of fear
  165. Impaired recognition of disgust in Huntington's disease gene carriers
  166. Repetition priming between parts and wholes: Tests of a computational model of familiar face recognition
  167. A specific neural substrate for perceiving facial expressions of disgust
  168. Delusions and Brain Injury: The Philosophy and Psychology of Belief
  169. Recognition of Facial Expressions: Selective Impairment of Specific Emotions in Huntington's Disease
  170. Facial expression megamix: Tests of dimensional and category accounts of emotion recognition
  171. Impaired auditory recognition of fear and anger following bilateral amygdala lesions
  172. Knowing where and Knowing What: A Double Dissociation
  173. Self Priming: A Short term Benefit of Repetition
  174. A differential neural response in the human amygdala to fearful and happy facial expressions
  175. Eye Patching and the Rehabilitation of Visual Neglect
  176. Facial Emotion Recognition after Bilateral Amygdala Damage: Differentially Severe Impairment of Fear
  177. Categorical Perception of Morphed Facial Expressions
  178. An Item specific Locus of Repetition Priming
  179. Reinstatement of Prior Processing and Repetition Priming
  180. Delusional Misidentification of Inanimate Objects: A Literature Review and Neuropsychological Analysis of Cognitive Deficits in Two Cases
  181. Delusions Demand Attention
  182. Facial expression processing after amygdalotomy
  183. Loss of disgust
  184. Two loci of repetition priming in the recognition of familiar faces.
  185. Ettlinger revisited: the relation between agnosia and sensory impairment.
  186. Face processing impairments after amygdalotomy
  187. Recognition impairments and face imagery
  188. Repetition priming and proper name processing. Do common names and proper names prime each other?
  189. Face-Processing Impairments and the Capgras Delusion
  190. Fregoli delusion and erotomania.
  191. Face perception after brain injury
  192. Face Recognition Impairments [and Discussion]
  193. NEGLECT AND VISUAL RECOGNITION
  194. Priming of face matching in amnesia
  195. Dissociable face processing impairments after brain injury
  196. Understanding covert recognition
  197. Different Impairments Contribute to Neglect Dyslexia
  198. Visual Processing of Stimulus Compounds in Newborn Infants
  199. COVERT AND OVERT RECOGNITION IN PROSOPAGNOSIA
  200. Disentangling neglect and hemianopia
  201. Perceptual categories and the computation of “grandmother”
  202. Unawareness of impaired face recognition
  203. Accounting for Delusional Misidentifications
  204. Facial neglect
  205. Implicit access to semantic information
  206. Intrusive automatic or nonpropositional inner speech following bilateral cerebral injury: A case report
  207. Defective recognition of familiar people
  208. Childhood prosopagnosia
  209. Face processing, laterality and contrast sensitivity
  210. LOSS OF MEMORY FOR PEOPLE FOLLOWING TEMPORAL LOBE DAMAGE
  211. Prosopagnosia and object agnosia without covert recognition
  212. Modes of word recognition in the left and right cerebral hemispheres
  213. Accessing stored information about familiar people
  214. Boundaries of covert recognition in prosopagnosia
  215. Configurational Information in Face Perception
  216. “Afferent dysgraphia” in a patient and in normal subjects
  217. Face recognition without awareness
  218. “Neglect dyslexia” and the early visual processing of letters in words and nonwords
  219. More things in heaven and earth than are dreamt of in the initial letter acuity hypothesis
  220. Putting names to faces
  221. Interference with face naming
  222. Parallel processing of the sex and familiarity of faces.
  223. Matching familiar and unfamiliar faces on identity and expression
  224. Understanding face recognition
  225. Face–name interference.
  226. Matching Familiar and Unfamiliar Faces on Internal and External Features
  227. The faces that launched a thousand slips: Everyday difficulties and errors in recognizing people
  228. Familiarity decisions for faces presented to the left and right cerebral hemispheres
  229. Different methods of lexical access for words presented in the left and right visual hemifields
  230. Right cerebral hemisphere superiority for constructing facial representations
  231. Hemisphericity: A critical review
  232. Left hemisphere superiority for pronounceable nonwords, but not for unpronounceable letter strings
  233. Comments on the interpretation of lateral asymmetries in the naming of words and line drawings
  234. Learning to See the Impossible
  235. Asymmetry of cerebral hemispheric function in normal and poor readers.
  236. Studies toward a model of laterality effects for picture and word naming*1
  237. Ear asymmetry for the perception of monaurally presented words accompanied by binaural white noise
  238. Perception of Numerical Stimuli Felt by Fingers of the Left and Right Hands
  239. Hemispheric laterality effects in the enumeration of visually presented collections of dots by children
  240. Age-of-acquisition and recognition of nouns presented in the left and right visual fields: A failed hypothesis
  241. An experimental investigation of developmental differences in ability to recognise faces presented to the left and right cerebral hemispheres