Mayu Nishimura
McMaster University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Mayu Nishimura.
Developmental Science | 2008
Mayu Nishimura; Daphne Maurer; Linda Jeffery; Elizabeth Pellicano; Gillian Rhodes
In adults, facial identity is coded by opponent processes relative to an average face or norm, as evidenced by the face identity aftereffect: adapting to a face biases perception towards the opposite identity, so that a previously neutral face (e.g. the average) resembles the identity of the computationally opposite face. We investigated whether children as young as 8 use adaptive norm-based coding to represent faces, a question of interest because 8-year-olds are less accurate than adults at recognizing faces and do not show the adult neural markers of face expertise. We found comparable face identity aftereffects in 8-year-olds and adults: perception of identity in both groups shifted in the direction predicted by norm-based coding. This finding suggests that, by 8 years of age, the adaptive computational mechanisms used to code facial identity are like those of adults and hence that childrens immaturities in face processing arise from another source.
Visual Cognition | 2008
Mayu Nishimura; M. D. Rutherford; Daphne Maurer
There is conflicting evidence about whether individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) demonstrate configural processing of faces. We examined two types of configural processing of unfamiliar faces in high-functioning adults with ASD: Holistic processing (processing a face as a gestalt percept) and processing of second-order relations (the spatial relations among facial features, e.g., distance between two eyes). Compared to age- and IQ-matched typical adults, 17 adults with ASD demonstrated normal holistic processing (as demonstrated by the composite face effect), normal sensitivity to second-order relations in upright faces, and the expected disruption of sensitivity to second-order relations in inverted faces. They were also normal in using the internal features and shape of the external contour to make same/different judgements about facial identity. The results provide converging evidence of configural processing of unfamiliar faces in high-functioning adults with ASD, and bring into question the generalizability of previous reports of abnormal face processing in individuals with ASD.
Perception | 2008
Mayu Nishimura; Daphne Maurer
Adults appear to be more sensitive to configural information, including second-order relations (the spacing of features), in faces than in other objects. Superior processing of second-order relations in faces may arise from our experience of identifying faces at the individual level of categorisation (eg Bob versus John) but other objects at the basic level of categorisation (eg table versus chair; Gauthier and Tarr, 1997 Vision Research 37 1673–1682). We simulated this learning difference with novel stimuli (comprised of blobs) by having two groups view the same stimuli but learn to identify the objects only at the basic level (based on the number of constituent blobs) or at both the basic level and individual level (based on the spacing, or second-order relations, of the blobs) of categorisation. Results from two experiments showed that, after training, observers in the individual-level training group were more sensitive to the second-order relations in novel exemplars of the learned category than observers in the basic-level training group. This is the first demonstration of specific improvement in sensitivity to second-order relations after training with non-face stimuli. The findings are consistent with the hypothesis that adults are more sensitive to second-order relations in faces than in other objects, at least in part, because they have more experience identifying faces at the individual level of categorisation.
Developmental Science | 2017
Gillian Rhodes; Mayu Nishimura; Adélaïde de Heering; Linda Jeffery; Daphne Maurer
Faces are adaptively coded relative to visual norms that are updated by experience, and this adaptive coding is linked to face recognition ability. Here we investigated whether adaptive coding of faces is disrupted in individuals (adolescents and adults) who experience face recognition difficulties following visual deprivation from congenital cataracts in infancy. We measured adaptive coding using face identity aftereffects, where smaller aftereffects indicate less adaptive updating of face-coding mechanisms by experience. We also examined whether the aftereffects increase with adaptor identity strength, consistent with norm-based coding of identity, as in typical populations, or whether they show a different pattern indicating some more fundamental disruption of face-coding mechanisms. Cataract-reversal patients showed significantly smaller face identity aftereffects than did controls (Experiments 1 and 2). However, their aftereffects increased significantly with adaptor strength, consistent with norm-based coding (Experiment 2). Thus we found reduced adaptability but no fundamental disruption of norm-based face-coding mechanisms in cataract-reversal patients. Our results suggest that early visual experience is important for the normal development of adaptive face-coding mechanisms.
Journal of Experimental Child Psychology | 2010
Xiaoqing Gao; Daphne Maurer; Mayu Nishimura
Perception | 2003
Liezhong Ge; Jing Luo; Mayu Nishimura; Kang Lee
Developmental Psychobiology | 2006
Vickie L. Armstrong; Paul M. Brunet; Chao He; Mayu Nishimura; Heather Poole; Ferrinne Spector
Frontiers in Psychology | 2013
Xiaoqing Gao; Daphne Maurer; Mayu Nishimura
Developmental Psychobiology | 2006
Vickie L. Armstrong; Paul M. Brunet; Chao He; Mayu Nishimura; Heather Poole; Ferrinne Spector
NeuroImage | 2018
Qijing Yu; Dana M. McCall; Roya Homayouni; Lingfei Tang; Zhijian Chen; Daniel Schoff; Mayu Nishimura; Sarah Raz; Noa Ofen