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Date created: 2019-06-05 02:15 AM | Last Updated: 2022-02-18 08:03 AM

Identifier: DOI 10.17605/OSF.IO/SKH48

Category: Project

Description: Holistic face processing has been widely implicated in conscious face perception. Yet, little is known about whether holistic face processing occurs when faces are processed unconsciously. The present study used the composite face task and continuous flash suppression (CFS) to inspect whether the processing of target facial information (the top half of a face) is influenced by irrelevant information (the bottom half) that is presented unconsciously. Results of multiple experiments showed that the composite effect was observed in both the monocular and CFS conditions, providing the first evidence that the processing of top facial halves is influenced by the aligned bottom halves no matter whether they are presented consciously or unconsciously. However, much of the composite effect for faces without masking was disrupted when bottom facial parts were rendered with CFS. These results suggest that holistic face processing can occur unconsciously, but also highlight the significance of holistic processing of consciously presented faces.

License: CC-By Attribution 4.0 International

Wiki

This project is for the "Holistic face processing is influenced by non-conscious visual information" paper, which has been accepted at British Journal of Psychology (https://doi.org/10.1111/bjop.12521).

  • The analysis R codes tidying-up the raw data are avaiable in the linked Github repository.
  • The raw data and pre-processed data used to perform rm-ANOVA are available in the storage.

This project …

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Citation

Tags

composite taskcontinuous flash suppressionface processingholistic processingnon-conscious processingpublication

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