Inverting faces does not abolish cultural diversity in eye movements

H Rodger, DJ Kelly, C Blais, R Caldara - Perception, 2010 - journals.sagepub.com
Face processing is widely understood to be a basic, universal visual function effortlessly
achieved by people from all cultures and races. The remarkable recognition performance for
faces is markedly and specifically affected by picture-plane inversion: the so-called face-
inversion effect (FIE), a finding often used as evidence for face-specific mechanisms.
However, it has recently been shown that culture shapes the way people deploy eye
movements to extract information from faces. Interestingly, the comparable lack of …

[PDF][PDF] Inverting faces does not abolish cultural diversity in eye movements

D Kelly, R Jack, C Blais, AS Caldara, B Rossion… - Journal of Vision, 2008 - Citeseer
Face processing is widely understood to be a basic, universal visual function effortlessly
achieved by people from all cultures and races. The remarkable recognition performance for
faces is markedly and specifically affected by picture-plane inversion: the so-called face-
inversion effect (FIE), a finding often used as evidence for face-specific mechanisms.
However, it has recently been shown that culture shapes the way people deploy eye
movements to extract information from faces. Interestingly, the comparable lack of …
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