Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. May 24, 2011 · The current status of Bruce and Young's (1986) serial model of face naming is discussed 25 years after its original publication. In the first part of the paper, evidence for and against the serial model is reviewed.

    • J. Richard Hanley
    • 14
    • 2011
    • 24 May 2011
    • Vicki Bruce and Andy Young
    • Understandingface recognition 3 1 1
    • face 13

    The aim of this paper is to develop a theoretical model and a set of terms for understanding and discussing how we recognize familiar faces, and the relationship between recognition and other aspects of face processing. It is suggested that there are seven distinct types of information that we derive from seen faces; these are labelled pictorial, s...

    given to how heavily dependent they may be on analysis of changes in the shape and position of facial features across time.

    the person identity nodes ‘outside’ the rest of the cognitive system, in order to emphasize the logically distinct role that they play in person recognition. However, we must stress that person identity nodes are not seen as fundamentally different from other ‘nodes’ in semantic memory - they just serve a key role in the identification of people. T...

  2. Presents a functional model to account for the perceptual and cognitive processes involved when people recognize faces. The model states that structural encoding processes provide descriptions suitable for the analysis of facial speech and expression and for face recognition units. Recognition involves a match between the products of structural encoding and previously stored structural codes ...

    • Vicki Bruce, Andy Young
    • 1986
  3. A functional model is proposed in which structural encoding processes provide descriptions suitable for the analysis of facial speech, for analysis of expression and for face recognition units. Recognition of familiar faces involves a match between the products of structural encoding and previously stored structural codes describing the appearance of familiar faces, held in face recognition units.

    • Vicki Bruce, Andy Young
    • 1986
  4. Aug 1, 2005 · Bruce and Young's 1 functional model of face processing (panel a) contains separate parallel routes for recognizing facial identity, facial expression and lipspeech. The route labelled 'directed ...

    • Andrew J. Calder, Andrew W. Young
    • 2005
  5. Mar 13, 2015 · Abstract. According to the classic Bruce and Young (1986) model of face recognition, identity and emotional expression information from the face are processed in parallel and independently. Since this functional model was published, a growing body of research has challenged this viewpoint and instead support an interdependence view.

  6. People also ask

  7. A functional model is proposed in which structural encoding processes provide descriptions suitable for the analysis of facial speech, for analysis of expression and for face recognition units. Recognition of familiar faces involves a match between the products of structural encoding and previously stored structural codes describing the appearance of familiar faces, held in face recognition units.

  1. People also search for