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Dive into the research topics where Sarah Cohan is active.

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Featured researches published by Sarah Cohan.


Cognition | 2013

Using regression to measure holistic face processing reveals a strong link with face recognition ability

Joseph DeGutis; Jeremy Wilmer; Rogelio J. Mercado; Sarah Cohan

Although holistic processing is thought to underlie normal face recognition ability, widely discrepant reports have recently emerged about this link in an individual differences context. Progress in this domain may have been impeded by the widespread use of subtraction scores, which lack validity due to their contamination with control condition variance. Regressing, rather than subtracting, a control condition from a condition of interest corrects this validity problem by statistically removing all control condition variance, thereby producing a specific measure that is uncorrelated with the control measure. Using 43 participants, we measured the relationships amongst the Cambridge Face Memory Test (CFMT) and two holistic processing measures, the composite task (CT) and the part-whole task (PW). For the holistic processing measures (CT and PW), we contrasted the results for regressing vs. subtracting the control conditions (parts for PW; misaligned congruency effect for CT) from the conditions of interest (wholes for PW; aligned congruency effect for CT). The regression-based holistic processing measures correlated with each other and with CFMT, supporting the idea of a unitary holistic processing mechanism that is involved in skilled face recognition. Subtraction scores yielded weaker correlations, especially for the PW. Together, the regression-based holistic processing measures predicted more than twice the amount of variance in CFMT (R(2)=.21) than their respective subtraction measures (R(2)=.10). We conclude that holistic processing is robustly linked to skilled face recognition. In addition to confirming this theoretically significant link, these results provide a case in point for the inappropriateness of subtraction scores when requiring a specific individual differences measure that removes the variance of a control task.


Cognitive Neuropsychology | 2012

Holistic processing of the mouth but not the eyes in developmental prosopagnosia

Joseph DeGutis; Sarah Cohan; Rogelio J. Mercado; Jeremy Wilmer; Ken Nakayama

Because holistic processing is a hallmark of normal face recognition, we ask whether such processing is reduced in developmental prosopagnosia (DP), and, if so, what the sources are of this deficit. Existing literature provides a mixed picture, with face inversion effects showing consistent holistic processing deficits but unable to locate their source and with some composite face studies showing reduced holistic processing and some not. We addressed this issue more thoroughly with a very large sample of DPs (N = 38) performing the part–whole task, a well-accepted measure of holistic processing that allows for the separate evaluation of individual face parts. Contrary to an expected overall reduction in holistic processing, we found an intact holistic advantage for the mouth and a complete absence of a holistic advantage for the eye region. Less severely impaired prosopagnosics showed significantly more holistic processing of the mouth, suggesting that holistic processing can aid them in recognizing faces.


PLOS ONE | 2012

A Robust Method of Measuring Other-Race and Other-Ethnicity Effects: The Cambridge Face Memory Test Format

Elinor McKone; Sacha Stokes; Jia Liu; Sarah Cohan; Chiara Fiorentini; Madeleine Pidcock; Galit Yovel; Mary Broughton; Michel Pelleg

Other-race and other-ethnicity effects on face memory have remained a topic of consistent research interest over several decades, across fields including face perception, social psychology, and forensic psychology (eyewitness testimony). Here we demonstrate that the Cambridge Face Memory Test format provides a robust method for measuring these effects. Testing the Cambridge Face Memory Test original version (CFMT-original; European-ancestry faces from Boston USA) and a new Cambridge Face Memory Test Chinese (CFMT-Chinese), with European and Asian observers, we report a race-of-face by race-of-observer interaction that was highly significant despite modest sample size and despite observers who had quite high exposure to the other race. We attribute this to high statistical power arising from the very high internal reliability of the tasks. This power also allows us to demonstrate a much smaller within-race other ethnicity effect, based on differences in European physiognomy between Boston faces/observers and Australian faces/observers (using the CFMT-Australian).


Frontiers in Human Neuroscience | 2014

Face processing improvements in prosopagnosia: successes and failures over the last 50 years

Joseph DeGutis; Christopher Chiu; Mallory Grosso; Sarah Cohan

Clinicians and researchers have widely believed that face processing cannot be improved in prosopagnosia. Though more than a dozen reported studies have attempted to enhance face processing in prosopagnosics over the last 50 years, evidence for effective treatment approaches has only begun to emerge. Here, we review the current literature on spontaneous recovery in acquired prosopagnosia (AP), as well as treatment attempts in acquired and developmental prosopagnosia (DP), differentiating between compensatory and remedial approaches. We find that for AP, rather than remedial methods, strategic compensatory training such as verbalizing distinctive facial features has shown to be the most effective approach (despite limited evidence of generalization). In children with DP, compensatory training has also shown some effectiveness. In adults with DP, two recent larger-scale studies, one using remedial training and another administering oxytocin, have demonstrated group-level improvements and evidence of generalization. These results suggest that DPs, perhaps because of their more intact face processing infrastructure, may benefit more from treatments targeting face processing than APs.


Brain | 2014

Holistic face training enhances face processing in developmental prosopagnosia

Joseph DeGutis; Sarah Cohan; Ken Nakayama


Journal of Vision | 2014

A proposal for developmental prosopagnosia 'sub-types' based on differential face perception and face memory performance

Sarah Cohan; Joseph DeGutis


Journal of Vision | 2013

Facial expression training improves emotion recognition and changes neural tuning in a patient with acquired emotion recognition deficits and prosopagnosia

Joseph DeGutis; Sarah Cohan; David Alexander Kahn; Geoffrey K. Aguirre; Ken Nakayama


Journal of Vision | 2016

Broadly Superior: Many, but not all, visual and non-visual abilities are strong in face super-recognizers

Sarah Cohan; Ken Nakayama; Brad Duchaine


Journal of Vision | 2012

Holistic Face Deficits in Developmental Prosopagnosia: Abnormal Processing of the Eyes

Sarah Cohan; Joseph DeGutis; Rogelio J. Mercado; Jeremy Wilmer; Ken Nakayama


Journal of Vision | 2011

Training with Same-Race Faces Improves Holistic Processing of Other-Race Faces

Rogelio J. Mercado; Sarah Cohan; Joseph DeGutis

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Rogelio J. Mercado

VA Boston Healthcare System

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Christopher Chiu

VA Boston Healthcare System

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Mallory Grosso

VA Boston Healthcare System

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Elinor McKone

Australian National University

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