scholarly journals Optimal Viewing Position in Face Recognition

i-Perception ◽  
10.1068/ic244 ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 244-244
Author(s):  
Janet H. Hsiao ◽  
Tong Liu
2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elena Belanova ◽  
Josh P Davis ◽  
Trevor Thompson

Face recognition skills are distributed on a continuum, with developmental prosopagnosics and super-recognisers at the bottom and top ends, respectively. Holistic processing propensity is associated with face recognition ability and may be impaired in some developmental prosopagnosics and enhanced in some super-recognisers. Across two experiments we compared holistic processing of 75 super-recognisers and 89 typical-range ability controls using The Part-Whole Effect (PWE) paradigm. A subgroup of super-recognisers demonstrated enhanced PWEs in the nose region, suggesting they integrate the nose into the holistic face percept more effectively than controls. Focussed processing of the nose region, an optimal viewing position to extract the holistic properties of faces, has previously been associated with superior face recognition, and this may partly explain the superiority of some super-recognisers. However, a few super-recognisers generated significant nose region performance patterns in an opposite direction across both experiments, suggesting their superiority is driven by alternative mechanisms. These results support proposals that super-recognition is associated with heterogeneous underlying processes.


2012 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 22-22 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. H. Hsiao ◽  
T. T. Liu

2009 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 57-61 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Smilek ◽  
G. J. F. Solman ◽  
P. Murawski ◽  
J. S. A. Carriere

Author(s):  
Françoise Vitu ◽  
Denis Lancelin ◽  
Valentine Marrier d'Unienville

2015 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 174-200 ◽  
Author(s):  
Deia Ganayim

Abstract The present study provides a further exploration of the role of Arabic letter visibility as a possible cause of the Optimal Viewing Position (OVP) effect. We used isolated connected and un-connected Arabic letters of different shapes (basic, initial, medial, final) placed at the center of fixation (Experiment 1) and at various possible positions in isolated presentation (Experiment 2). In order to investigate whether performance in the visual identification task is modulated by letter type, we presented each of the isolated connected and un-connected letter targets in each of the eleven stimulus positions across the array to produce a mean RT (ms) for each of the letter types. Using the initial fixation paradigm enabled us to compare reaction times with correctly identified letter targets appearing in the different possible positions. The findings of the present experiments demonstrated that visual letter recognition is influenced by: (i) the isolated letters’ type (connected, un-connected), as connected letters are easier to recognize than un-connected letters; (ii) isolated letters’ shape (basic, initial, medial, final), as medial and final are harder to recognize than basic and initial letter shapes; (iii) visual field, as reading rates were longer for letter stimuli that were presented in LVF compared to RVF; and (iv) eccentricity, as letter reading rates were correlated with their eccentric placement.


Author(s):  
Ben A. Parris ◽  
Dinkar Sharma ◽  
Brendan Weekes

Abstract. Coloring only a single letter in the Stroop task can result in a reduction or elimination of Stroop interference. The present experiments were designed to test whether this modulation of Stroop interference occurs at all letter positions. Specifically, we investigated whether Stroop interference was reduced when the colored letter occupied the optimal viewing position (OVP). The experiments show that Stroop interference is not reduced at the OVP (Experiment 1) and that Stroop interference at the OVP is significantly greater than at other letter positions (Experiments 1 and 2). This finding has important theoretical and methodological consequences for studies of automatic processing in visual word recognition.


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