All Stories

  1. Eye movement differences when recognising and learning moving and static faces
  2. Both identity and non-identity face perception tasks predict developmental prosopagnosia and face recognition ability
  3. The association between childhood trauma and emotion recognition is reduced or eliminated when controlling for alexithymia and psychopathy traits
  4. Familial Transmission of Developmental Prosopagnosia: New Case Reports from an Extended Family and Identical Twins
  5. Face specific inversion effects provide evidence for two subtypes of developmental prosopagnosia
  6. The effects of face coverings, own-ethnicity biases, and attitudes on emotion recognition
  7. Face masks versus sunglasses: limited effects of time and individual differences in the ability to judge facial identity and social traits
  8. An Update of the Benton Facial Recognition Test
  9. Enhanced Matching of Children’s Faces in “Super-Recognisers” But Not High-Contact Controls
  10. Objective Patterns of Face Recognition Deficits in 165 Adults with Self-Reported Developmental Prosopagnosia
  11. Coping strategies for developmental prosopagnosia
  12. The consistency of superior face recognition skills in police officers
  13. The limits of super recognition: An other-ethnicity effect in individuals with extraordinary face recognition skills.
  14. Identifying Hallmark Symptoms of Developmental Prosopagnosia for Non-Experts
  15. Developmental prosopagnosia with concurrent topographical difficulties: A case report and virtual reality training programme
  16. Super-recognition in development: A case study of an adolescent with extraordinary face recognition skills
  17. Intact word processing in developmental prosopagnosia
  18. Eye-Movement Strategies in Developmental Prosopagnosia and “Super” Face Recognition
  19. Prevalence of Face Recognition Deficits in Middle Childhood
  20. An in-depth cognitive examination of individuals with superior face recognition skills
  21. The independence of expression and identity in face-processing: evidence from neuropsychological case studies
  22. Movement cues aid face recognition in developmental prosopagnosia.
  23. Oxytocin increases bias, but not accuracy, in face recognition line-ups
  24. Rehabilitation of face-processing skills in an adolescent with prosopagnosia: Evaluation of an online perceptual training programme
  25. Age differences in conscious versus subconscious social perception: The influence of face age and valence on gaze following.
  26. The rehabilitation of face recognition impairments: a critical review and future directions
  27. The Movement Advantage in Famous and Unfamiliar Faces: A Comparison of Point-Light Displays and Shape-Normalised Avatar Stimuli
  28. The Use of Dynamic Cues in Self and Familiar Face Recognition