'You all look alike to me' is hard-wired in us, research finds
You often hear it framed in a comic sense, though it's a form of stereotyping, and even prejudice. "You all look alike to me."
Jul 8, 2019
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You often hear it framed in a comic sense, though it's a form of stereotyping, and even prejudice. "You all look alike to me."
Jul 8, 2019
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Remembering a familiar face engages a wider network of brain regions than previously thought, according to a study of healthy men and women published in JNeurosci.
Apr 29, 2019
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Women wearing heavy makeup are less likely to be thought of as good leaders, new research from Abertay University has found.
Mar 9, 2018
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(Medical Xpress)βThe milestones of infant brain development are difficult to study. So researchers often seek out subjects with disabilities that prevented them from reaching those developmental stages in infancy. One early ...
The human brain is constantly abuzz with electrical activity as brain cells, called neurons, respond to sensory input and give rise to the world we perceive. Six particular regions of the brain, called face patches, contain ...
Mar 30, 2017
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We can alter our facial features in ways that make us look more trustworthy, but don't have the same ability to appear more competent, a team of New York University psychology researchers has found.
Jun 18, 2015
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Face perception plays an important role in social communication. There have been many studies of face perception in human using non-invasive neuroimaging and electrophysiological methods, but studies of face perception in ...
May 21, 2015
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Feeling socially disconnected may lead us to lower our threshold for determining that another being is animate or alive, according to new research published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological ...
Sep 8, 2014
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The headlights β two eyes, the radiator cowling β a smiling mouth: This is how our brain sometimes creates a face out of a car front. The same happens with other objects: in house facades, trees or stones β a "human ...
May 21, 2014
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New research finds face matching, as when customs agents check passports, to be incredibly fallible, with error rates between 10 and 20 percent under ideal, laboratory-induced conditions, and much worse in more realistic ...
Mar 11, 2014
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