Published in J Exp Child Psychol on March 09, 2009
Human face recognition ability is specific and highly heritable. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A (2010) 2.36
Categorization, categorical perception, and asymmetry in infants' representation of face race. Dev Sci (2010) 1.58
Similarity and difference in the processing of same- and other-race faces as revealed by eye tracking in 4- to 9-month-olds. J Exp Child Psychol (2010) 1.52
Caucasian infants scan own- and other-race faces differently. PLoS One (2011) 1.45
Spontaneous voice-face identity matching by rhesus monkeys for familiar conspecifics and humans. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A (2011) 1.27
I spy with my little eye: typical, daily exposure to faces documented from a first-person infant perspective. Dev Psychobiol (2013) 1.15
Perceptual training prevents the emergence of the other race effect during infancy. PLoS One (2011) 1.12
The development of the uncanny valley in infants. Dev Psychobiol (2011) 1.08
Adults scan own- and other-race faces differently. PLoS One (2012) 1.05
Developmental Origins of the Other-Race Effect. Curr Dir Psychol Sci (2013) 1.05
On the facilitative effects of face motion on face recognition and its development. Front Psychol (2014) 0.99
Developmental processes in face perception. Sci Rep (2013) 0.99
Infants' knowledge of their own species. Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci (2011) 0.98
Biracial and monoracial infant own-race face perception: an eye tracking study. Dev Sci (2012) 0.94
Brief daily exposures to Asian females reverses perceptual narrowing for Asian faces in Caucasian infants. J Exp Child Psychol (2012) 0.93
Both children and adults scan faces of own and other races differently. Vision Res (2014) 0.91
The development of face perception in infancy: intersensory interference and unimodal visual facilitation. Dev Psychol (2012) 0.91
Own- and other-race face identity recognition in children: the effects of pose and feature composition. Dev Psychol (2013) 0.91
An eye-tracking investigation of developmental changes in infants' exploration of upright and inverted human faces. Infancy (2011) 0.89
Early experience and multisensory perceptual narrowing. Dev Psychobiol (2014) 0.89
Holistic processing for other-race faces in chinese participants occurs for upright but not inverted faces. Front Psychol (2013) 0.87
Children's Racial Categorization in Context. Child Dev Perspect (2015) 0.85
Bayesian face recognition and perceptual narrowing in face-space. Dev Sci (2012) 0.82
Intersensory redundancy hinders face discrimination in preschool children: evidence for visual facilitation. Dev Psychol (2013) 0.82
Asian infants show preference for own-race but not other-race female faces: the role of infant caregiving arrangements. Front Psychol (2015) 0.82
Visual selective attention biases contribute to the other-race effect among 9-month-old infants. Dev Psychobiol (2015) 0.81
Part-based and configural processing of owner's face in dogs. PLoS One (2014) 0.79
Neural correlates of own- and other-race face recognition in children: a functional near-infrared spectroscopy study. Neuroimage (2013) 0.78
Infant perceptual development for faces and spoken words: an integrated approach. Dev Psychobiol (2014) 0.78
Angry facial expressions bias gender categorization in children and adults: behavioral and computational evidence. Front Psychol (2015) 0.78
Developing the Own-Race Advantage in 4-, 6-, and 9-Month-Old Taiwanese Infants: A Perceptual Learning Perspective. Front Psychol (2016) 0.77
A face detection bias for horizontal orientations develops in middle childhood. Front Psychol (2015) 0.77
Artificial faces are harder to remember. Comput Human Behav (2015) 0.77
Developing Race Categories in Infancy via Bayesian Face Recognition. Vis cogn (2013) 0.76
Many faces, one rule: the role of perceptual expertise in infants' sequential rule learning. Front Psychol (2015) 0.76
Minimizing Skin Color Differences Does Not Eliminate the Own-Race Recognition Advantage in Infants. Infancy (2011) 0.76
The other-race effect in 3-year-old German and Cameroonian children. Front Psychol (2014) 0.76
Development of category formation for faces differing by age in 9- to 12-month-olds: An effect of experience with infant faces. Br J Dev Psychol (2016) 0.75
Neural processing of race by individuals with Williams syndrome: do they show the other-race effect? (And why it matters). Soc Neurosci (2011) 0.75
Development of Effective Connectivity during Own- and Other-Race Face Processing: A Granger Causality Analysis. Front Hum Neurosci (2016) 0.75
Domains and Naive Theories. Wiley Interdiscip Rev Cogn Sci (2011) 0.75
Statistical learning: a powerful mechanism that operates by mere exposure. Wiley Interdiscip Rev Cogn Sci (2016) 0.75
Ethorobotics: A New Approach to Human-Robot Relationship. Front Psychol (2017) 0.75
Infant attention to same- and other-race faces. Cognition (2016) 0.75
A mechanistic approach to cross-domain perceptual narrowing in the first year of life. Brain Sci (2014) 0.75
Visual scanning of male and female bodies in infancy. J Exp Child Psychol (2017) 0.75
Face Experience and the Attentional Bias for Fearful Expressions in 6- and 9-Month-Old Infants. Front Psychol (2017) 0.75
Bilingual Infants Demonstrate Perceptual Flexibility in Phoneme Discrimination but Perceptual Constraint in Face Discrimination. Front Psychol (2017) 0.75
The Origins of Social Categorization. Trends Cogn Sci (2017) 0.75
Face race processing and racial bias in early development: A perceptual-social linkage. Curr Dir Psychol Sci (2017) 0.75
Infants Rely More on Gaze Cues From Own-Race Than Other-Race Adults for Learning Under Uncertainty. Child Dev (2017) 0.75
Plasticity may change inputs as well as processes, structures, and responses. Cogn Dev (2017) 0.75
Is face processing species-specific during the first year of life? Science (2002) 4.61
Bubbles: a technique to reveal the use of information in recognition tasks. Vision Res (2001) 4.15
Representation of the gender of human faces by infants: a preference for female. Perception (2002) 4.13
The other-race effect develops during infancy: evidence of perceptual narrowing. Psychol Sci (2007) 3.21
Three-month-olds, but not newborns, prefer own-race faces. Dev Sci (2005) 3.15
Nature and nurture in own-race face processing. Psychol Sci (2006) 3.13
Plasticity of face processing in infancy. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A (2005) 2.97
The influence of culture: holistic versus analytic perception. Trends Cogn Sci (2005) 2.90
Recognition of own-race and other-race faces by three-month-old infants. J Child Psychol Psychiatry (2004) 2.37
Face perception in monkeys reared with no exposure to faces. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A (2008) 2.34
Culture shapes how we look at faces. PLoS One (2008) 2.32
Recognizing facial cues: individual discrimination by chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) and rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta). J Comp Psychol (2000) 2.14
Effect of visual experience on face processing: a developmental study of inversion and non-native effects. Dev Sci (2004) 1.82
Cross-Race Preferences for Same-Race Faces Extend Beyond the African Versus Caucasian Contrast in 3-Month-Old Infants. Infancy (2007) 1.70
Towards an exemplar model of face processing: the effects of race and distinctiveness. Q J Exp Psychol A (1992) 1.61
Children's ability to recognize other children's faces. Child Dev (1976) 1.61
Event-related potentials and time course of the "other-race" face classification advantage. Neuroreport (2004) 1.58
Children's face recognition memory: more evidence for the cross-race effect. J Appl Psychol (2003) 1.52
Development of differential recognition for own- and other-race faces. J Psychol (1982) 1.51
Infant preference for female faces occurs for same- but not other-race faces. J Neuropsychol (2008) 1.41
Face recognition in primates: a cross-species study. Behav Processes (1998) 1.38
An own-race advantage for components as well as configurations in face recognition. Cognition (2007) 1.37
Superiority of conspecific faces and reduced inversion effect in face perception by a chimpanzee. Folia Primatol (Basel) (1993) 1.07
Cardiac correlates of individual recognition in the chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes). J Comp Psychol (1986) 0.98
Development of schematic face preference in macaque monkeys. Behav Processes (2004) 0.94
Are faces special for sheep? Evidence from facial and object discrimination learning tests showing effects of inversion and social familiarity. Behav Processes (1996) 0.92
Infant monkeys' visual responses to drawings of normal and distorted faces. Am J Primatol (1998) 0.89
Other race recognition: a comparison of black American and African subjects. Percept Mot Skills (1986) 0.83
Representation of the gender of human faces by infants: a preference for female. Perception (2002) 4.13
The other-race effect develops during infancy: evidence of perceptual narrowing. Psychol Sci (2007) 3.21
Three-month-olds, but not newborns, prefer own-race faces. Dev Sci (2005) 3.15
Specialization of neural mechanisms underlying face recognition in human infants. J Cogn Neurosci (2002) 2.42
Children's lie-telling to conceal a parent's transgression: legal implications. Law Hum Behav (2004) 2.10
Children's conceptual knowledge of lying and its relation to their actual behaviors: implications for court competence examinations. Law Hum Behav (2002) 2.09
The development of executive functioning and theory of mind. A comparison of Chinese and U.S. preschoolers. Psychol Sci (2006) 1.90
Cross-Race Preferences for Same-Race Faces Extend Beyond the African Versus Caucasian Contrast in 3-Month-Old Infants. Infancy (2007) 1.70
Social and cognitive correlates of children's lying behavior. Child Dev (2008) 1.69
Lying in the elementary school years: verbal deception and its relation to second-order belief understanding. Dev Psychol (2007) 1.68
A Domain-General Theory of the Development of Perceptual Discrimination. Curr Dir Psychol Sci (2007) 1.63
Cross-cultural differences in children's choices, categorizations, and evaluations of truths and lies. Dev Psychol (2007) 1.59
Categorization, categorical perception, and asymmetry in infants' representation of face race. Dev Sci (2010) 1.58
White lie-telling in children for politeness purposes. Int J Behav Dev (2007) 1.56
Similarity and difference in the processing of same- and other-race faces as revealed by eye tracking in 4- to 9-month-olds. J Exp Child Psychol (2010) 1.52
Japanese and American Children's Reasoning about Accepting Credit for Prosocial Behavior. Soc Dev (2010) 1.51
Effects of experience on fetal voice recognition. Psychol Sci (2003) 1.45
Caucasian infants scan own- and other-race faces differently. PLoS One (2011) 1.45
Infant preference for female faces occurs for same- but not other-race faces. J Neuropsychol (2008) 1.41
Kinetics and adsorption behavior of carboxymethyl starch on alpha-alumina in aqueous medium. J Colloid Interface Sci (2006) 1.38
Do young children always say yes to yes-no questions? A metadevelopmental study of the affirmation bias. Child Dev (2003) 1.37
Dogs (Canis lupus familiaris) fail to show understanding of means-end connections in a string-pulling task. Anim Cogn (2004) 1.28
Spontaneous voice-face identity matching by rhesus monkeys for familiar conspecifics and humans. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A (2011) 1.27
Face processing limitation to own species in primates: a comparative study in brown capuchins, Tonkean macaques and humans. Behav Processes (2006) 1.23
Two faces of the other-race effect: recognition and categorisation of Caucasian and Chinese faces. Perception (2009) 1.21
CULTURAL DISPLAY RULES DRIVE EYE GAZE DURING THINKING. J Cross Cult Psychol (2006) 1.21
The role of bottom-up processing in perceptual categorization by 3- to 4-month-old infants: simulations and data. J Exp Psychol Gen (2004) 1.18
"Intuitive" lie detection of children's deception by law enforcement officials and university students. Law Hum Behav (2004) 1.17
Evaluating claims people make about themselves: the development of skepticism. Child Dev (2007) 1.15
Perceptual training prevents the emergence of the other race effect during infancy. PLoS One (2011) 1.12
Independent component analysis reveals atypical electroencephalographic activity during visual perception in individuals with autism. Biol Psychiatry (2008) 1.10
Action video game players and deaf observers have larger Goldmann visual fields. Vision Res (2009) 1.09
Lying and truth-telling in children: from concept to action. Child Dev (2010) 1.09
Characteristics and outcomes of culture-negative versus culture-positive severe sepsis. Crit Care (2013) 1.08
Children's Reasoning about Lie-telling and Truth-telling in Politeness Contexts. Soc Dev (2009) 1.08
Detecting faces in pure noise images: a functional MRI study on top-down perception. Neuroreport (2008) 1.07
Adults scan own- and other-race faces differently. PLoS One (2012) 1.05
Developmental Origins of the Other-Race Effect. Curr Dir Psychol Sci (2013) 1.05
What are you looking at? Acuity for triadic eye gaze. J Gen Psychol (2004) 1.03
Are eyes windows to a deceiver's soul? Children's use of another's eye gaze cues in a deceptive situation. Dev Psychol (2004) 1.03
Developing cultural differences in face processing. Dev Sci (2011) 1.02
Are children's faces really more appealing than those of adults? Testing the baby schema hypothesis beyond infancy. J Exp Child Psychol (2011) 1.02
Development of flexible visual recognition memory in human infants. Dev Sci (2004) 1.01
Neural correlates of spontaneous deception: A functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS)study. Neuropsychologia (2013) 1.00
Activation of face expertise and the inversion effect. Psychol Sci (2006) 0.99
Looking Across Domains to Understand Infant Representation of Emotion. Emot Rev (2011) 0.99
Culture shapes efficiency of facial age judgments. PLoS One (2010) 0.99
Is the face-perception system human-specific at birth? Dev Psychol (2011) 0.98
Reasoning about the disclosure of success and failure to friends among children in the United States and China. Dev Psychol (2008) 0.98
Infants' knowledge of their own species. Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci (2011) 0.98
Development of visual preference for own- versus other-race faces in infancy. Dev Psychol (2015) 0.97
An inner face advantage in children's recognition of familiar peers. J Exp Child Psychol (2008) 0.97
Binocular correlation model of face preference: how good, how simple? Dev Sci (2014) 0.97
Chinese Children's Moral Evaluation of Lies and Truths-Roles of Context and Parental Individualism-Collectivism Tendencies. Infant Child Dev (2010) 0.96
Social grooming in the kindergarten: the emergence of flattery behavior. Dev Sci (2007) 0.96
Permanent Genetic Resources added to Molecular Ecology Resources Database 1 October 2009-30 November 2009. Mol Ecol Resour (2010) 0.96
Visual advantage in deaf adults linked to retinal changes. PLoS One (2011) 0.96
A distributed neural system for top-down face processing. Neurosci Lett (2008) 0.96
Lying in the name of the collective good: a developmental study. Dev Sci (2008) 0.95
Children's use of frequency information for trait categorization and behavioral prediction. Dev Psychol (2006) 0.94
Complex questions asked by defense lawyers but not prosecutors predicts convictions in child abuse trials. Law Hum Behav (2008) 0.94
Deaf and hearing children: a comparison of peripheral vision development. Dev Sci (2010) 0.94