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Original Articles

Local and Relational Aspects of Face Distinctiveness

Pages 449-473 | Published online: 22 Oct 2010

Keep up to date with the latest research on this topic with citation updates for this article.

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Petra C. Schmid & David M. Amodio. (2021) Effects of high and low power on the visual encoding of faces. Social Neuroscience 16:3, pages 293-306.
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Koviljka Barisnikov, Marine Thomasson, Jennyfer Stutzmann & Fleur Lejeune. (2020) Relation between processing facial identity and emotional expression in typically developing school-age children and those with Down syndrome. Applied Neuropsychology: Child 9:2, pages 179-192.
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Joyce M. Oates, Zehra F. Peynircioğlu, Matthew G. Rhodes & Hannah Hausman. (2019) The fan effect influences face recognition but does not moderate the own-age bias. Journal of Cognitive Psychology 31:7, pages 691-702.
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Rachel A. Robbins, Terri L. Lewis & Daphne Maurer. (2018) The relationship between discrimination and memory for spacing and feature changes in houses. The Journal of General Psychology 145:2, pages 153-169.
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James W. Tanaka & Diana Simonyi. (2016) The “parts and wholes” of face recognition: A review of the literature. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 69:10, pages 1876-1889.
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Ciro Civile, Rossy P. McLaren & Ian P. L. McLaren. (2014) The face inversion effect—Parts and wholes: Individual features and their configuration. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 67:4, pages 728-746.
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Dario Bombari, Petra C. Schmid, Marianne Schmid Mast, Sandra Birri, Fred W. Mast & Janek S. Lobmaier. (2013) Emotion recognition: The role of featural and configural face information. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 66:12, pages 2426-2442.
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Ruth Kimchi & Rama Amishav. (2010) Faces as perceptual wholes: The interplay between component and configural properties in face processing. Visual Cognition 18:7, pages 1034-1062.
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Jorge Gersenowies, Erzsebet Marosi, Selene Cansino & Mario Rodriguez. (2010) EEG Power Spectral Measurements Comparing Normal and “Thatcherized” Faces. International Journal of Neuroscience 120:8, pages 570-579.
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CaraD. Osborne & SarahV. Stevenage. (2008) Internal feature saliency as a marker of familiarity and configural processing. Visual Cognition 16:1, pages 23-43.
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TimothyJ. Perfect, Ian Dennis & Amelia Snell. (2007) The effects of local and global processing orientation on eyewitness identification performance. Memory 15:7, pages 784-798.
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Timo Mäntylä & Linus Holm. (2006) Gaze control and recollective experience in face recognition. Visual Cognition 14:3, pages 365-386.
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Bradley C. Duchaine, Galit Yovel, Edward J. Butterworth & Ken Nakayama. (2006) Prosopagnosia as an impairment to face-specific mechanisms: Elimination of the alternative hypotheses in a developmental case. Cognitive Neuropsychology 23:5, pages 714-747.
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Timo Mäntylä & Linus Holm. (2005) Remembering parts and wholes: Configural processing in face recollection. European Journal of Cognitive Psychology 17:6, pages 753-769.
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Michael Lewis & Andrew Edmonds. (2005) Searching for faces in scrambled scenes. Visual Cognition 12:7, pages 1309-1336.
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Helmut Leder & Claus-Christian Carbon. (2005) When context hinders! Learn–test compatibility in face recognition. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A 58:2, pages 235-250.
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Anna Gilchrist & Elinor McKone. (2003) Early maturity of face processing in children: Local and relational distinctiveness effects in 7-year-olds. Visual Cognition 10:7, pages 769-793.
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Bruno Rossion. (2002) Is sex categorization from faces really parallel to face recognition?. Visual Cognition 9:8, pages 1003-1020.
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Helmut Leder & Vicki Bruce. (2000) When inverted faces are recognized: The role of configural information in face recognition. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A 53:2, pages 513-536.
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Vitaliy Babenko, Denis Yavna, Elena Vorobeva, Ekaterina Denisova, Pavel Ermakov & Ekaterina Kovsh. (2021) Relationship Between Facial Areas With the Greatest Increase in Non-local Contrast and Gaze Fixations in Recognizing Emotional Expressions. International Journal of Cognitive Research in Science, Engineering and Education (IJCRSEE) 9:3, pages 359-368.
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Peter J. Hills, Anthony J. Sullivan & J. Michael Pake. (2012) Aberrant first fixations when looking at inverted faces in various poses: The result of the centre‐of‐gravity effect?. British Journal of Psychology 103:4, pages 520-538.
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Sam S. Rakover. (2012) A feature-inversion effect: can an isolated feature show behavior like the face-inversion effect?. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review 19:4, pages 617-624.
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Raymond Bruyer. (2011) Configural Face Processing: A Meta-Analytic Survey. Perception 40:12, pages 1478-1490.
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Helmut Leder, Michael Forster & Gernot Gerger. (2011) The Glasses Stereotype Revisited. Swiss Journal of Psychology 70:4, pages 211-222.
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Galia Avidan, Michal Tanzer & Marlene Behrmann. (2011) Impaired holistic processing in congenital prosopagnosia. Neuropsychologia 49:9, pages 2541-2552.
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Miko M. Wilford & Gary L. Wells. (2010) Does Facial Processing Prioritize Change Detection?. Psychological Science 21:11, pages 1611-1615.
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Kim M. Curby & Isabel Gauthier. (2010) To the Trained Eye: Perceptual Expertise Alters Visual Processing. Topics in Cognitive Science 2:2, pages 189-201.
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Jason J S Barton. (2009) What is Meant by Impaired Configural Processing in Acquired Prosopagnosia?. Perception 38:2, pages 242-260.
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Elinor McKone, Alex Aitkin & Mark Edwards. (2005) Categorical and Coordinate Relations in Faces, or Fechner's Law and Face Space Instead?. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance 31:6, pages 1181-1198.
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Jason J.S Barton, Jingher Zhao & Julian P Keenan. (2003) Perception of global facial geometry in the inversion effect and prosopagnosia. Neuropsychologia 41:12, pages 1703-1711.
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Bruno Rossion & Isabel Gauthier. (2016) How Does the Brain Process Upright and Inverted Faces?. Behavioral and Cognitive Neuroscience Reviews 1:1, pages 63-75.
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Helmut Leder & Vicki Bruce. (2000) Inverting line drawings of faces 1This manuscript was started in Stirling when the first author was staying there with a research Grant from the Swiss National Fond. We want to thank Alexia Knüsel and Anne Zbinden for their help in data collection and Adrian von Mühlenen who allowed to publish his face to illustrate the stimulus material. Moreover, we thank two anonymous reviewers for their comments.. Swiss Journal of Psychology 59:3, pages 159-169.
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