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Featured researches published by Adélaïde de Heering.


Frontiers in Human Neuroscience | 2010

Early Visually Evoked Electrophysiological Responses Over the Human Brain (P1, N170) Show Stable Patterns of Face-Sensitivity from 4 years to Adulthood.

Dana Kuefner; Adélaïde de Heering; Corentin Jacques; Ernesto Palmero-Soler; Bruno Rossion

Whether the development of face recognition abilities truly reflects changes in how faces, specifically, are perceived, or rather can be attributed to more general perceptual or cognitive development, is debated. Event-related potential (ERP) recordings on the scalp offer promise for this issue because they allow brain responses to complex visual stimuli to be relatively well isolated from other sensory, cognitive and motor processes. ERP studies in 5- to 16-year-old children report large age-related changes in amplitude, latency (decreases) and topographical distribution of the early visual components, the P1 and the occipito-temporal N170. To test the face specificity of these effects, we recorded high-density ERPs to pictures of faces, cars, and their phase-scrambled versions from 72 children between the ages of 4 and 17, and a group of adults. We found that none of the previously reported age-dependent changes in amplitude, latency or topography of the P1 or N170 were specific to faces. Most importantly, when we controlled for age-related variations of the P1, the N170 appeared remarkably similar in amplitude and topography across development, with much smaller age-related decreases in latencies than previously reported. At all ages the N170 showed equivalent face-sensitivity: it had the same topography and right hemisphere dominance, it was absent for meaningless (scrambled) stimuli, and larger and earlier for faces than cars. The data also illustrate the large amount of inter-individual and inter-trial variance in young childrens data, which causes the N170 to merge with a later component, the N250, in grand-averaged data. Based on our observations, we suggest that the previously reported “bi-fid” N170 of young children is in fact the N250. Overall, our data indicate that the electrophysiological markers of face-sensitive perceptual processes are present from 4u2009years of age and do not appear to change throughout development.


PLOS ONE | 2008

Prolonged visual experience in adulthood modulates holistic face perception

Adélaïde de Heering; Bruno Rossion

Background Using the well-known composite illusion as a marker of the holistic perception of faces, we tested how prolonged visual experience with a specific population of faces (4- to 6-year-old children) modulates the face perception system in adulthood. Methodology/Principal Findings We report a face composite effect that is larger for adult than children faces in a group of adults without experience with children faces (“children-face novices”), while it is of equal magnitude for adults and children faces in a population of preschool teachers (“children-face experts”). When considering preschool teachers only, we observed a significant correlation between the number of years of experience with children faces and the differential face composite effect between children and adults faces. Participants with at least 10 years of qualitative experience with children faces had a larger composite face effect for children than adult faces. Conclusions/Significance Overall, these observations indicate that even in adulthood face processes can be reshaped qualitatively, presumably to facilitate efficient processing of the differential morphological features of the frequently encountered population of faces.


Cognition | 2008

Newborns' face recognition is based on spatial frequencies below 0.5 cycles per degree

Adélaïde de Heering; C Turati; Bruno Rossion; Hermann Bulf; Valérie Goffaux; Francesca Simion

A critical question in Cognitive Science concerns how knowledge of specific domains emerges during development. Here we examined how limitations of the visual system during the first days of life may shape subsequent development of face processing abilities. By manipulating the bands of spatial frequencies of face images, we investigated what is the nature of the visual information that newborn infants rely on to perform face recognition. Newborns were able to extract from a face the visual information lying from 0 to 1 cpd (Experiment 1), but only a narrower 0-0.5 cpd spatial frequency range was successful to accomplish face recognition (Experiment 2). These results provide the first empirical support of a low spatial frequency advantage in individual face recognition at birth and suggest that early in life low-level, non-specific perceptual constraints affect the development of the face processing system.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2012

Early deafness increases the face inversion effect but does not modulate the composite face effect

Adélaïde de Heering; Abeer Aljuhanay; Bruno Rossion; Olivier Pascalis

Early deprivation in audition can have striking effects on the development of visual processing. Here we investigated whether early deafness induces changes in holistic/configural face processing. To this end, we compared the results of a group of early deaf participants to those of a group of hearing participants in an inversion-matching task (Experiment 1) and a composite face task (Experiment 2). We hypothesized that deaf individuals would show an enhanced inversion effect and/or an increased composite face effect compared to hearing controls in case of enhanced holistic/configural face processing. Conversely, these effects would be reduced if they rely more on facial features than hearing controls. As a result, we found that deaf individuals showed an increased inversion effect for faces, but not for non-face objects. They were also significantly slower than hearing controls to match inverted faces. However, the two populations did not differ regarding the overall size of their composite face effect. Altogether these results suggest that early deafness does not enhance or reduce the amount of holistic/configural processing devoted to faces but may increase the dependency on this mode of processing.


Developmental Psychobiology | 2016

Three-month-old infants' sensitivity to horizontal information within faces.

Adélaïde de Heering; Valérie Goffaux; Nicolas Dollion; Ornella Godard; Karine Durand; Jean-Yves Baudouin

Horizontal information is crucial to face processing in adults. Yet the ontogeny of this preferential type of processing remains unknown. To clarify this issue, we tested 3-month-old infants sensitivity to horizontal information within faces. Specifically, infants were exposed to the simultaneous presentation of a face and a car presented in upright or inverted orientation while their looking behavior was recorded. Face and car images were either broadband (UNF) or filtered to only reveal horizontal (H), vertical (V) or this combined information (HV). As expected, infants looked longer at upright faces than at upright cars, but critically, only when horizontal information was preserved in the stimulus (UNF, HV, H). These results first indicate that horizontal information already drives upright face processing at 3 months of age. They also recall the importance, for infants, of some facial features, arranged in a top-heavy configuration, particularly revealed by this band of information.


International Journal of Behavioral Development | 2013

Sensitivity to Spacing Information Increases More for the Eye Region than for the Mouth Region during Childhood.

Adélaïde de Heering; Christine Schiltz

Sensitivity to spacing information within faces improves with age and reaches maturity only at adolescence. In this study, we tested 6–16-year-old children’s sensitivity to vertical spacing when the eyes or the mouth is the facial feature selectively manipulated. Despite the similar discriminability of these manipulations when they are embedded in inverted faces (Experiment 1), children’s sensitivity to spacing information manipulated in upright faces improved with age only when the eye region was concerned (Experiment 2). Moreover, children’s ability to process the eye region did not correlate with their selective visual attention, marking the automation of the mechanism (Experiment 2). In line with recent findings, we suggest here that children rely on a holistic/configural face processing mechanism to process the eye region, composed of multiple features to integrate, which steadily improves with age.


Journal of Experimental Child Psychology | 2007

Holistic Face Processing Is Mature at 4 Years of Age: Evidence from the Composite Face Effect.

Adélaïde de Heering; Sarah Houthuys; Bruno Rossion


Journal of Vision | 2007

Holistic face processing can be independent of gaze behavior: Evidence from the face composite effect

Adélaïde de Heering; Bruno Rossion; C Turati; Francesca Simion


Journal of Vision | 2012

The Effect of Starting School on Preschoolers’ Ability to Recognize Child and Adult Faces

Ana Bracovic; Adélaïde de Heering; Daphne Maurer


Journal of Vision | 2014

Categorization of faces versus objects in the infants right occipito-temporal cortex by means of fast periodic visual stimulation

Adélaïde de Heering; Goedele Van Belle; Bruno Rossion

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Bruno Rossion

Catholic University of Leuven

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Valérie Goffaux

Université catholique de Louvain

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Abeer Aljuhanay

Université catholique de Louvain

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Claire de Liedekerke

Université catholique de Louvain

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Corentin Jacques

Catholic University of Leuven

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Dana Kuefner

Université catholique de Louvain

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