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Does face inversion change spatial frequency tuning?
Authors:Willenbockel  Verena; Fiset  Daniel; Chauvin  Alan; Blais  Caroline; Arguin  Martin; Tanaka  James W; Bub  Daniel N; Gosselin  Frédéric
Abstract:The authors examined spatial frequency (SF) tuning of upright and inverted face identification using an SF variant of the Bubbles technique (F. Gosselin & P. G. Schyns, 2001). In Experiment 1, they validated the SF Bubbles technique in a plaid detection task. In Experiments 2a–c, the SFs used for identifying upright and inverted inner facial features were investigated. Although a clear inversion effect was present (mean accuracy was 24% higher and response times 455 ms shorter for upright faces), SF tunings were remarkably similar in both orientation conditions (mean r = .98; an SF band of 1.9 octaves centered at 9.8 cycles per face width for faces of about 6°). In Experiments 3a and b, the authors demonstrated that their technique is sensitive to both subtle bottom-up and top-down induced changes in SF tuning, suggesting that the null results of Experiments 2a–c are real. The most parsimonious explanation of the findings is provided by the quantitative account of the face inversion effect: The same information is used for identifying upright and inverted inner facial features, but processing has greater sensitivity with the former. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)
Keywords:face perception  identification  inversion effect  spatial frequency  face inversion effect  facial features
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