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Preprocessing images of faces: correlations with human perceptions of distinctiveness and familiarity

The aim of the paper work is to further our understanding of how humans process and recognise faces. The authors do this by proceeding in parallel with testing subjects and building computer models. If a model reflects the way that humans process face images, it ought to fail (in the same way) to fi...

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Main Authors: Hancock, P.J.B, Burton, A.M, Bruce, V
Format: Conference Proceeding
Language:English
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Burton, A.M
Bruce, V
description The aim of the paper work is to further our understanding of how humans process and recognise faces. The authors do this by proceeding in parallel with testing subjects and building computer models. If a model reflects the way that humans process face images, it ought to fail (in the same way) to find the same faces easy or difficult. One characteristic of human recognition is that of distinctiveness: some faces are never forgotten, others easily lost in a crowd. The present paper describes the use of various forms of image processing to see whether they correlate with human perceptions of distinctiveness, memorability and familiarity.
doi_str_mv 10.1049/cp:19950755
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ispartof Fifth International Conference on Image Processing and its Applications, 1995, p.727-731
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subjects Computer vision and image processing techniques
Optical information, image and video signal processing
Psychophysics of vision, visual perception, binocular vision
title Preprocessing images of faces: correlations with human perceptions of distinctiveness and familiarity
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