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Outputs (4)

Learning own- and other-race facial identities: Testing implicit recognition with event-related brain potentials (2019)
Journal Article
Tüttenberg, S. C., & Wiese, H. (2019). Learning own- and other-race facial identities: Testing implicit recognition with event-related brain potentials. Neuropsychologia, 134, Article 107218. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2019.107218

Exposure to varying images of the same person can encourage the formation of a representation that is sufficiently robust to allow recognition of previously unseen images of this person. While behavioural work suggests that face identity learning is... Read More about Learning own- and other-race facial identities: Testing implicit recognition with event-related brain potentials.

Learning own- and other-race facial identities from natural variability (2019)
Journal Article
Tüttenberg, S. C., & Wiese, H. (2019). Learning own- and other-race facial identities from natural variability. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 72(12), 2788-2800. https://doi.org/10.1177/1747021819859840

Exposure to multiple varying face images of the same person encourages the formation of identity representations which are sufficiently robust to allow subsequent recognition from new, never-before seen images. While recent studies suggest that ident... Read More about Learning own- and other-race facial identities from natural variability.

Intentionally remembering or forgetting own- and other-race faces: Evidence from directed forgetting (2019)
Journal Article
Tüttenberg, S., & Wiese, H. (2020). Intentionally remembering or forgetting own- and other-race faces: Evidence from directed forgetting. British Journal of Psychology, 111(3), 570-597. https://doi.org/10.1111/bjop.12413

People are better at remembering faces of their own relative to another ethnic group. This so‐called own‐race bias (ORB) has been explained in terms of differential perceptual expertise for own‐ and other‐race faces or, alternatively, as resulting fr... Read More about Intentionally remembering or forgetting own- and other-race faces: Evidence from directed forgetting.

Later but not early stages of familiar face recognition depend strongly on attentional resources: Evidence from event-related brain potentials (2019)
Journal Article
Wiese, H., Ingram, B. T., Elley, M. L., Tüttenberg, S. C., Burton, A. M., & Young, A. W. (2019). Later but not early stages of familiar face recognition depend strongly on attentional resources: Evidence from event-related brain potentials. Cortex, 120, 147-158. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cortex.2019.06.004

In everyday life we usually recognise personally familiar faces efficiently and without apparent effort. This study examined to which extent the neural processes involved in recognising personally familiar faces depend on attentional resources by ana... Read More about Later but not early stages of familiar face recognition depend strongly on attentional resources: Evidence from event-related brain potentials.