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Journal article 1154 views

Dissociating mechanisms involved in accessing identity by dynamic and static cues.

Leslie L Steede, Jeremy Tree Orcid Logo, Graham J Hole

Visual Cognition, Volume: 15, Issue: 1, Pages: 116 - 119

Swansea University Author: Jeremy Tree Orcid Logo

Abstract

Research indicates that idiosyncratic facial and bodily movements can provide useful cues for recovering person identity. Across four experiments, two developmental prosopagnosics (CS and AA) as well as control groups, were tested. In Experiments 1 and 2, CS was tested on his ability to discriminate...

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Published in: Visual Cognition
Published: 2007
URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa16868
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spelling 2014-01-10T16:34:34.3740771 v2 16868 2014-01-10 Dissociating mechanisms involved in accessing identity by dynamic and static cues. 373fd575114a743d502a979c6161b1ad 0000-0001-6000-8125 Jeremy Tree Jeremy Tree true false 2014-01-10 HPS Research indicates that idiosyncratic facial and bodily movements can provide useful cues for recovering person identity. Across four experiments, two developmental prosopagnosics (CS and AA) as well as control groups, were tested. In Experiments 1 and 2, CS was tested on his ability to discriminate and learn to name identities by their idiosyncratic facial movements. In Experiments 4 and 5, A A completed two different tasks which tested his ability to learn to recognize identities by their idiosyncratic facial and bodily movements. In Experiments 1-3, we used a variant of a task to determine whether CS could discriminate between identities on the basis of their idiosyncratic facial movements. In Experiments 4-6, we tested whether AA could learn to recognize five identities on the basis of their idiosyncratic facial (Experiment 4) and bodily movements (Experiment 5). Taken together, the results of these experiments suggest that the mechanisms involved in accessing identity by dynamic facial and bodily movements, are likely to be different to those involved in static face recognition. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2012 APA, all rights reserved) Journal Article Visual Cognition 15 1 116 119 prosopagnosia 31 1 2007 2007-01-31 COLLEGE NANME Psychology COLLEGE CODE HPS Swansea University 2014-01-10T16:34:34.3740771 2014-01-10T16:34:34.3740771 Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences School of Psychology Leslie L Steede 1 Jeremy Tree 0000-0001-6000-8125 2 Graham J Hole 3
title Dissociating mechanisms involved in accessing identity by dynamic and static cues.
spellingShingle Dissociating mechanisms involved in accessing identity by dynamic and static cues.
Jeremy Tree
title_short Dissociating mechanisms involved in accessing identity by dynamic and static cues.
title_full Dissociating mechanisms involved in accessing identity by dynamic and static cues.
title_fullStr Dissociating mechanisms involved in accessing identity by dynamic and static cues.
title_full_unstemmed Dissociating mechanisms involved in accessing identity by dynamic and static cues.
title_sort Dissociating mechanisms involved in accessing identity by dynamic and static cues.
author_id_str_mv 373fd575114a743d502a979c6161b1ad
author_id_fullname_str_mv 373fd575114a743d502a979c6161b1ad_***_Jeremy Tree
author Jeremy Tree
author2 Leslie L Steede
Jeremy Tree
Graham J Hole
format Journal article
container_title Visual Cognition
container_volume 15
container_issue 1
container_start_page 116
publishDate 2007
institution Swansea University
college_str Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
hierarchytype
hierarchy_top_id facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences
hierarchy_top_title Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
hierarchy_parent_id facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences
hierarchy_parent_title Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
department_str School of Psychology{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences{{{_:::_}}}School of Psychology
document_store_str 0
active_str 0
description Research indicates that idiosyncratic facial and bodily movements can provide useful cues for recovering person identity. Across four experiments, two developmental prosopagnosics (CS and AA) as well as control groups, were tested. In Experiments 1 and 2, CS was tested on his ability to discriminate and learn to name identities by their idiosyncratic facial movements. In Experiments 4 and 5, A A completed two different tasks which tested his ability to learn to recognize identities by their idiosyncratic facial and bodily movements. In Experiments 1-3, we used a variant of a task to determine whether CS could discriminate between identities on the basis of their idiosyncratic facial movements. In Experiments 4-6, we tested whether AA could learn to recognize five identities on the basis of their idiosyncratic facial (Experiment 4) and bodily movements (Experiment 5). Taken together, the results of these experiments suggest that the mechanisms involved in accessing identity by dynamic facial and bodily movements, are likely to be different to those involved in static face recognition. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2012 APA, all rights reserved)
published_date 2007-01-31T03:19:22Z
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