Tuesday Afternoon Posters, Pavilion

Poster Session: Tuesday, May 23, 2023, 2:45 – 6:45 pm, Pavilion

Abstract# 

Poster Title

First Author

Session

56.465

Dyad arrangement affects perceived emotional intensity

Gray, Katie L.H.

Face Perception: Social cognition

56.464

Positive Valence Acquisition of Non-social Stimuli Associated with Low Cognitive Effort

Reck, Lily R.

Face Perception: Social cognition

56.463

Effect of Sclera Size on Social Judgements: A Potential Support for the Cooperative Eye Hypothesis

Boyer-Brosseau, Mathias

Face Perception: Social cognition

56.462

Viewing images with closed eyes diminishes implied social presence

Jacobs, Oliver

Face Perception: Social cognition

56.461

How we can use the eyes to understand human interaction

Lau, Wee Kiat

Face Perception: Social cognition

56.460

New task - new results? How the area of direct gaze is influenced by the method of measurement

Linke, Linda

Face Perception: Social cognition

56.459

Lateralization of dynamic social interaction perception

Small, Hannah

Face Perception: Social cognition

56.458

Inferential tracking reveals context is more informative than faces in judgments of trustworthiness.

Fang, Yifan

Face Perception: Social cognition

56.457

Religious labels and food preferences, but not country of origin, support opposing aftereffects on the basis of religion

Shakil, Maheen

Face Perception: Social cognition

56.456

Does face recognition correlate with narcissim? A replication.

Romero-Ayala, Gabriella

Face Perception: Social cognition

56.455

General architectural and learning constraints produce visual features sensitive to facing dyads

Janini, Daniel

Face Perception: Social cognition

56.454

Both Purely Visual and Simulation-based Models Uniquely Explain Human Social Interaction Judgements

Malik, Manasi

Face Perception: Social cognition

56.453

Electrophysiological evidence that own-race faces are recognized more automatically

Galinier, Chloé

Face Perception: Social cognition

56.452

A NETWORK OF REGIONS IN THE HUMAN BRAIN INVOLVED IN PROCESSING FAMILIARITY

Noad, Kira

Face Perception: Social cognition

56.451

Anxious youth and adults share threat-biased interpretations of visual and linguistic ambiguity

McDonagh, Delaney

Face Perception: Development and disorders

56.450

Facial Emotion Recognition in People with Differing Levels of Eating Disorder Symptoms

Nudnou, Ilya

Face Perception: Development and disorders

56.449

Leveraging computational and animal models of vision to probe atypical emotion recognition in autism

Ramezanpour, Hamidreza

Face Perception: Development and disorders

56.448

Pose dependent face recognition in autism spectrum disorder

Kamensek, Todd

Face Perception: Development and disorders

56.447

Exploring facial expression recognition in Parkinson’s

Gracey, Maille

Face Perception: Development and disorders

56.446

Semantic encoding improves face recognition in prosopagnosia

Navon, Yuval

Face Perception: Development and disorders

56.445

Prosopagnosia elicits atypical fixation patterns during dynamic facial expression recognition

Stacchi, Lisa

Face Perception: Development and disorders

56.444

Quantifying dynamic facial expression recognition thresholds in prosopagnosia

Poncet, Fanny

Face Perception: Development and disorders

56.443

Putting Memory back into Face Recognition: Aspects of Face Recollection Contribute to Deficits in Developmental Prosopagnosia

Palsamudram, Tanvi

Face Perception: Development and disorders

56.442

Fine-grained face race processing in prosopagnosia

Schaller, Pauline

Face Perception: Development and disorders

56.441

Accounting for speed-accuracy trade-offs in developmental prosopagnosia

Lowes, Judith

Face Perception: Development and disorders

56.440

Can face recognition/recollection in developmental prosopagnosia really be improved? Evidence from a repetition-lag training paradigm

Kirsch, Leah

Face Perception: Development and disorders

56.439

Does the face say it all? Examining face and body integration in whole-person perception.

Forner, Katelyn

Face Perception: Wholes, parts, configurations, and features

56.438

Face information used to classify identity depends on emotional expression and vice-versa

Martin, Emily

Face Perception: Wholes, parts, configurations, and features

56.436

Configural selectivity for faces in IT cortex is experience-dependent

Jagadeesh, Akshay V

Face Perception: Wholes, parts, configurations, and features

56.435

Illusory Conjunction in Faces

Fung, Herrick

Face Perception: Wholes, parts, configurations, and features

56.434

Colour information biases facial age estimation and reduces inter-observer variability

Hsieh, Jean Y. J.

Face Perception: Wholes, parts, configurations, and features

56.433

The impact of eyeglasses on face identity perception

Nguyen, Hillary

Face Perception: Wholes, parts, configurations, and features

56.432

Face recognition ability is correlated with strength of cortical tuning to high-level identity features in natural faces

Jurigova, Barbora

Face Perception: Wholes, parts, configurations, and features

56.431

Does perceptual integration efficiency predict face identification skills?

Côté, Laurianne

Face Perception: Wholes, parts, configurations, and features

56.430

The Overestimation Effect in Gaze Perception Reduces with Distance

Horstmann, Gernot

Face Perception: Wholes, parts, configurations, and features

56.429

Mouth-specific distortions: Evidence from prosopometamorphopsia for independent representations of individual facial features

Kidder, Alexis

Face Perception: Wholes, parts, configurations, and features

56.428

A novel framework to study configural and holistic processing

Zeng, Yuxuan

Face Perception: Wholes, parts, configurations, and features

56.427

Two faces of holistic face processing: Facilitation and interference underlying holistic processing paradigms

Jin, Haiyang

Face Perception: Wholes, parts, configurations, and features

56.426

Faces Are Not Processed Holistically in Ensemble Judgments

Gauthier, Isabel

Face Perception: Wholes, parts, configurations, and features

56.425

Brain-optimized models reveal increase in few-shot concept learning accuracy across human visual cortex

St-Yves, Ghislain

Object Recognition: Neural mechanisms

56.424

Evaluating the Central-Peripheral Dichotomy in human visual cortex using anatomical and retinotopic data in Human Connectome Project

Zhaoping, Li

Object Recognition: Neural mechanisms

56.423

Lesioning category-selective units in silico yields functionally specialized deficits

Prince, Jacob S.

Object Recognition: Neural mechanisms

56.422

Changes in the speed of visual processing between foveola and perifovea: a combined behavioral and EEG investigation

Poletti, Martina

Object Recognition: Neural mechanisms

56.421

The effects of visual backward masking on visual spatiotemporal dynamics

Xie, Siying

Object Recognition: Neural mechanisms

56.420

Recurrent processing in the visual cortex during object recognition

Maniquet, Timothée

Object Recognition: Neural mechanisms

56.419

Color and Shape Contingency Representations in Rhesus Macaques

Loggia, Spencer

Object Recognition: Neural mechanisms

56.418

Adaptation to numerosity changes monotonic responses of early visual cortex

Zhang, Liangyou

Object Recognition: Neural mechanisms

56.417

Simultaneous recordings from posterior and anterior body-responsive regions in the macaque Superior Temporal Sulcus.

Bognar, Anna

Object Recognition: Neural mechanisms

56.416

Probing the role of bypass connections in core object recognition by chemogenetic suppression of macaque V4 neurons

Kar, Kohitij

Object Recognition: Neural mechanisms

56.415

Neurons in macaque V4 prefer natural images to scrambled textures

Lieber, Justin D.

Object Recognition: Neural mechanisms

56.414

Detectability of optogenetic stimulation in inferior temporal cortex in non-human primates depends on the plausibility of a corresponding visual event in the external world

Lafer-Sousa, Rosa

Object Recognition: Neural mechanisms

56.413

Spatial-frequency channels for object recognition by neural networks are twice as wide as those of humans

Subramanian, Ajay

Object Recognition: Neural mechanisms

56.412

The Sequential categorization identification paradigm: A New paradigm for combined inferences

Ak, Aylin

Object Recognition: Categories

56.411

Probing feature spaces of object categories with a drawing task

Tiedemann, Henning

Object Recognition: Categories

56.410

A common neural code for representing imagined and inferred tastes

Avery, Jason

Object Recognition: Categories

56.409

Visual adaptation to non-face animate objects elicits temporally robust high-level aftereffects

Reindl, Antonia

Object Recognition: Categories

56.408

The tortoise and the hare: Fast and slow learners in an object categorization task

Tanaka, James

Object Recognition: Categories

56.407

Temporal dynamics of stereoscopic object classification

Li, Zhen

Object Recognition: Categories

56.406

Optimizing Naturalistic Object Categorization with Diagnostic Low-Level Visual Information

Xie, Yongzhen

Object Recognition: Categories

56.405

Comparing Human Object Learning with Deep Neural Networks

Peng, Yinuo

Object Recognition: Categories

56.404

Category trumps shape as an organizational principle of object space in the human occipitotemporal cortex

Yargholi, Elahe

Object Recognition: Categories

56.403

Assessing the feasibility of high stimulus presentation rates for contrasting conditions in functional MRI studies

Roth, Johannes

Object Recognition: Categories

56.402

Control of BOLD fMRI Responses Via Stimuli Generated with Voxel-Weighted Neural Network Activation Maximization

Shinkle, Matthew

Object Recognition: Categories

56.401

Visuo-semantic clashes: What happens when objects do not look like they should?

Ólafsdóttir, Inga María

Object Recognition: Categories