Dynamics of letter string perception in the human occipitotemporal cortex.
- A. Tarkiainen, P. Helenius, P. Hansen, P. Cornelissen, R. Salmelin
- Psychology, BiologyBrain : a journal of neurology
- 1 November 1999
The present data strongly support the special role of the left inferior occipitotemporal cortex in visual word processing within 200 ms after stimulus onset.
Contrast sensitivity and coherent motion detection measured at photopic luminance levels in dyslexics and controls
- P. Cornelissen, Alex Richardson, A. Mason, S. Fowler, J. Stein
- Psychology, BiologyVision Research
- 1 May 1995
Visual cues to female physical attractiveness
- M. Tovée, D. Maisey, J. Emery, P. Cornelissen
- PsychologyProceedings of the Royal Society of London…
- 22 January 1999
Evidence is presented that weight scaled for height (the body mass index (BMI) is the primary determinant of sexual attractiveness rather than WHR and how visual cues, such as the perimeter–area ratio (PAR), can provide an accurate and reliable index of an individual's BMI.
A Specific and Rapid Neural Signature for Parental Instinct
- M. Kringelbach, A. Lehtonen, A. Stein
- Psychology, BiologyPLoS ONE
- 27 February 2008
Evidence in humans is provided of a potential brain basis for the “innate releasing mechanisms” described by Lorenz for affection and nurturing of young infants, which has potentially important clinical applications in relation to postnatal depression, and could provide opportunities for early identification of families at risk.
Dissociation of normal feature analysis and deficient processing of letter-strings in dyslexic adults.
- P. Helenius, A. Tarkiainen, P. Cornelissen, P. Hansen, R. Salmelin
- PsychologyCerebral Cortex
- 1 July 1999
While the early visual processing seems intact in dyslexic adults, the pattern of cortical activation starts to differ from that of fluent readers at the point where letter-string-specific signals first emerge during reading.
Coherent motion detection and letter position encoding
- P. Cornelissen, P. Hansen, Id Gilchrist, F. Cormack, J. Essex, C. Frankish
- PsychologyVision Research
- 1 July 1998
Human female attractiveness: waveform analysis of body shape
- M. Tovée, P. Hancock, S. Mahmoodi, Ben R R Singleton, P. Cornelissen
- PsychologyProceedings of the Royal Society of London…
- 7 November 2002
BMI is a stronger predictor of attractiveness than WHR, and it is possible that body shape is an important cue to attractiveness, but that simple ratios (such as WHR) are not adequately capturing it.
Female and male perceptions of female physical attractiveness in front-view and profile.
- M. Tovée, P. Cornelissen
- PsychologyBritish Journal of Psychology
- 1 May 2001
BMI was the primary predictor of attractiveness in both front and profile, and the putative visual cues to BMI showed a higher degree of view-invariance than shape cues such as the waist-hip ratio (WHR).
Dynamics of visual feature analysis and object-level processing in face versus letter-string perception.
- A. Tarkiainen, P. Cornelissen, R. Salmelin
- PsychologyBrain : a journal of neurology
- 1 May 2002
The inferior occipitotemporal activations at approximately 150 ms, which take place after the visual feature analysis at approximately 100 ms, are likely to represent a general object-level analysis stage that acts as a rapid gateway to higher cognitive processing.
During Visual Word Recognition, Phonology Is Accessed within 100 ms and May Be Mediated by a Speech Production Code: Evidence from Magnetoencephalography
- Katherine L. Wheat, P. Cornelissen, S. Frost, P. Hansen
- PsychologyJournal of Neuroscience
- 14 April 2010
Spatiotemporal concurrence demonstrates early phonological influences during visual word recognition and is consistent with phonological access being mediated by a speech production code.
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