about
The face-detection effect: configuration enhances detection.Diverting attention suppresses human amygdala responses to faces.Asymmetries of the human social brain in the visual, auditory and chemical modalitiesResponses to facial and non-facial stimuli presented tachistoscopically in either or both visual fields by patients with the Capgras delusion and paranoid schizophrenicsCulture differences in neural processing of faces and houses in the ventral visual cortexConnectivity analysis reveals a cortical network for eye gaze perceptionHemispheric asymmetry and theory of mind: is there an association?Explicating the face perception network with white matter connectivity.Faces and eyes in human lateral prefrontal cortex.Cuing effects of faces are dependent on handedness and visual fieldCharacteristic visuomotor influences on eye-movement patterns to faces and other high level stimuli.Repetition Suppression in Ventral Visual Cortex Is Diminished as a Function of Increasing Autistic Traits.Faces in the mist: illusory face and letter detectionPost-stimulus endogenous and exogenous oscillations are differentially modulated by task difficulty.Culture-related differences in default network activity during visuo-spatial judgments.Neural Univariate Activity and Multivariate Pattern in the Posterior Superior Temporal Sulcus Differentially Encode Facial Expression and Identity.Different neural mechanisms within occipitotemporal cortex underlie repetition suppression across same and different-size faces.Visual field bias in hearing and deaf adults during judgments of facial expression and identity.Differences in Sequential Eye Movement Behavior between Taiwanese and American Viewers.Division of labor between lateral and ventral extrastriate representations of faces, bodies, and objects.Routes through the face recognition system.Access to identity-specific semantic codes from familiar faces.Lateralized recognition of incomplete figures in a prolonged display controlled by eye movements.On the modularity of face recognition: the riddle of domain specificity.Very late outcome after focal wartime brain wounds.Can we learn from the clinically significant face processing deficits, prosopagnosia and Capgras delusion?III. Electrophysiological studies of face processing in Williams syndrome.Face viewpoint effects about three axes: the role of configural and featural processing.Schizotypy and hemispheric asymmetry: Results from two Chapman scales, the O-LIFE questionnaire, and two laterality measures.Object representations for multiple visual categories overlap in lateral occipital and medial fusiform cortex.Activation in primary auditory cortex during silent lipreading is determined by sex.EEG power spectral measurements comparing normal and "thatcherized" faces.Never forget a name: white matter connectivity predicts person memory.Neural correlates of the left-visual-field superiority in face perception appear at multiple stages of face processing.Event-related potential and functional MRI measures of face-selectivity are highly correlated: a simultaneous ERP-fMRI investigation.Neural responses to silent lipreading in normal hearing male and female subjects.Cerebral lateralization of face-selective and body-selective visual areas depends on handedness.Memory search for faces and digits in patients with unilateral brain lesions.Lateralized repetition priming for familiar faces: Evidence for asymmetric interhemispheric cooperation.Are angry male and female faces represented in opposite hemispheres of the female brain? A study using repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS).
P2860
Q29304482-017D2981-47E5-4711-8849-84D3DF5873E8Q30478106-788D789D-BC62-4693-944F-BB30B35BA46FQ30482079-D8A5D5B8-5494-4D1B-90BF-3444783596E3Q33590623-BA75BE1F-F50F-49C8-B42C-4ED42C6428F5Q33951314-E4B987A4-721B-4513-BE61-6AC617C94C59Q33979577-FDE38AB6-95FA-411D-9CA1-662574F4EC3AQ34134261-A768F118-2433-4CBD-B067-50F178E0A607Q34695566-C7E451D3-1E9F-4539-8FED-679C45E14ED9Q35025540-5FBE9306-0777-4EFF-A46B-C8193122AF0AQ35147182-B876A88D-6432-458D-8DD4-9F799A7CB1D0Q35898343-04EB8143-1E1F-48A4-9526-F8184183833BQ36098717-AE487E39-40B2-4BD5-9436-2F95A1CB959EQ36361992-1B1E0B6A-4ECF-4561-9CCC-8B2488E72AC1Q36576113-94C89B44-D66A-4BD9-B93E-F0527BADC3E1Q36619497-4E379580-9694-4988-BB22-26BF7914E582Q36708226-1677C408-FE02-4020-9F54-89FF22E93E8AQ36736915-DED3185A-DAE0-43EB-981B-09DFEB2BE8ABQ36907299-DDAACA62-ECF4-46BF-AD68-BDE39CBDE06DQ36918389-44E303F2-F275-4F46-AD21-3C4E2F08226EQ37898693-C4EE515D-61DE-4277-A172-A3DC035DE868Q38475219-1C81197C-BD50-4ED7-8416-F4B330FF1E98Q38491509-D7512090-EF51-4A77-9931-10380A53F224Q39799867-9201FE8F-1C5A-4060-BD3E-00EA989323D9Q40456852-41B6BE77-83DB-411D-8202-CD2FF41B34C9Q41222950-E72104F1-AF95-4BEA-85E6-E16D33637855Q41477793-04EB346A-A6BA-432C-AE36-58BC121ED8EBQ41757183-A9BE336D-0D88-45C7-9543-BE90EE935827Q44471974-2669027C-C935-44DF-A980-A2586DCDDCDFQ44785616-C5FED436-2E6F-44F8-9A4A-B9588B5A0885Q46241310-636C328B-4924-4CC0-8DCD-FC8BF661B22FQ48089849-4576EA9A-BFB4-48E3-9E5B-3EA5E8D8AD2DQ48135593-053548C6-82AD-49F4-BDBA-94CD6D6607DDQ48226211-A5711BF2-EF6F-4608-87E3-BC19BEB33370Q48318730-7FD60466-16B3-40C1-BFDD-484D7DDB92F3Q48322007-28542488-B7E4-49AD-85C7-EB0D5B1C23E1Q48412022-59B9AB69-FD85-44CC-A7A1-88B148440D28Q48417163-5A2DC960-6CA2-4C4B-809E-3FFDC72206E8Q48431941-3AC68C03-E752-4A57-9672-BDAB14D3024EQ48456412-C3826C5E-DED0-459D-A143-B27AA4ECC24AQ48493325-BA0B1646-13A3-4A55-AF6C-D8712389834F
P2860
description
1985 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
1985年の論文
@ja
1985年論文
@yue
1985年論文
@zh-hant
1985年論文
@zh-hk
1985年論文
@zh-mo
1985年論文
@zh-tw
1985年论文
@wuu
1985年论文
@zh
1985年论文
@zh-cn
name
Lateralized processes in face recognition.
@en
type
label
Lateralized processes in face recognition.
@en
prefLabel
Lateralized processes in face recognition.
@en
P1476
Lateralized processes in face recognition.
@en
P2093
P304
P356
10.1111/J.2044-8295.1985.TB01949.X
P478
76 ( Pt 2)
P577
1985-05-01T00:00:00Z