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Dive into the research topics where Stella J. Faerber is active.

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Featured researches published by Stella J. Faerber.


Acta Psychologica | 2010

Priming semantic concepts affects the dynamics of aesthetic appreciation

Stella J. Faerber; Helmut Leder; Gernot Gerger; Claus-Christian Carbon

Aesthetic appreciation (AA) plays an important role for purchase decisions, for the appreciation of art and even for the selection of potential mates. It is known that AA is highly reliable in single assessments, but over longer periods of time dynamic changes of AA may occur. We measured AA as a construct derived from the literature through attractiveness, arousal, interestingness, valence, boredom and innovativeness. By means of the semantic network theory we investigated how the priming of AA-relevant semantic concepts impacts the dynamics of AA of unfamiliar product designs (car interiors) that are known to be susceptible to triggering such effects. When participants were primed for innovativeness, strong dynamics were observed, especially when the priming involved additional AA-relevant dimensions. This underlines the relevance of priming of specific semantic networks not only for the cognitive processing of visual material in terms of selective perception or specific representation, but also for the affective-cognitive processing in terms of the dynamics of aesthetic processing.


PLOS ONE | 2012

African Perceptions of Female Attractiveness

Vinet Coetzee; Stella J. Faerber; Jaco M. Greeff; Carmen E. Lefevre; Daniel E. Re; David I. Perrett

Little is known about mate choice preferences outside Western, educated, industrialised, rich and democratic societies, even though these Western populations may be particularly unrepresentative of human populations. To our knowledge, this is the first study to test which facial cues contribute to African perceptions of African female attractiveness and also the first study to test the combined role of facial adiposity, skin colour (lightness, yellowness and redness), skin homogeneity and youthfulness in the facial attractiveness preferences of any population. Results show that youthfulness, skin colour, skin homogeneity and facial adiposity significantly and independently predict attractiveness in female African faces. Younger, thinner women with a lighter, yellower skin colour and a more homogenous skin tone are considered more attractive. These findings provide a more global perspective on human mate choice and point to a universal role for these four facial cues in female facial attractiveness.


I-perception | 2012

The power of liking: Highly sensitive aesthetic processing for guiding us through the world

Stella J. Faerber; Claus-Christian Carbon

Assessing liking is one of the most intriguing and influencing types of processing we experience day by day. We can decide almost instantaneously what we like and are highly consistent in our assessments, even across cultures. Still, the underlying mechanism is not well understood and often neglected by vision scientists. Several potential predictors for liking are discussed in the literature, among them very prominently typicality. Here, we analysed the impact of subtle changes of two perceptual dimensions (shape and colour saturation) of three-dimensional models of chairs on typicality and liking. To increase the validity of testing, we utilized a test-adaptation–retest design for extracting sensitivity data of both variables from a static (test only) as well as from a dynamic perspective (test–retest). We showed that typicality was only influenced by shape properties, whereas liking combined processing of shape plus saturation properties, indicating more complex and integrative processing. Processing the aesthetic value of objects, persons, or scenes is an essential and sophisticated mechanism, which seems to be highly sensitive to the slightest variations of perceptual input.


PLOS ONE | 2016

The Role of Familiarity for Representations in Norm-Based Face Space

Stella J. Faerber; Jürgen M. Kaufmann; Helmut Leder; Eva María Benito Martín; Stefan R. Schweinberger

According to the norm-based version of the multidimensional face space model (nMDFS, Valentine, 1991), any given face and its corresponding anti-face (which deviates from the norm in exactly opposite direction as the original face) should be equidistant to a hypothetical prototype face (norm), such that by definition face and anti-face should bear the same level of perceived typicality. However, it has been argued that familiarity affects perceived typicality and that representations of familiar faces are qualitatively different (e.g., more robust and image-independent) from those for unfamiliar faces. Here we investigated the role of face familiarity for rated typicality, using two frequently used operationalisations of typicality (deviation-based: DEV), and distinctiveness (face in the crowd: FITC) for faces of celebrities and their corresponding anti-faces. We further assessed attractiveness, likeability and trustworthiness ratings of the stimuli, which are potentially related to typicality. For unfamiliar faces and their corresponding anti-faces, in line with the predictions of the nMDFS, our results demonstrate comparable levels of perceived typicality (DEV). In contrast, familiar faces were perceived much less typical than their anti-faces. Furthermore, familiar faces were rated higher than their anti-faces in distinctiveness, attractiveness, likability and trustworthiness. These findings suggest that familiarity strongly affects the distribution of facial representations in norm-based face space. Overall, our study suggests (1) that familiarity needs to be considered in studies of mental representations of faces, and (2) that familiarity, general distance-to-norm and more specific vector directions in face space make different and interactive contributions to different types of facial evaluations.


Neuroscience Letters | 2018

First gender, then attractiveness: Indications of gender-specific attractiveness processing via ERP onsets

Claus-Christian Carbon; Stella J. Faerber; M. Dorothee Augustin; Bernhard Mitterer

We followed an ERP-based approach to gain knowledge on the dependence and temporal order of two essential processes of face perception: attractiveness and gender. By combining a dual-choice task with a go/nogo-paradigm focusing on the LRP and N200-effect, we could estimate the processing times and onsets of both types of face processing. The analyses of the LRP revealed that gender aspects were processed much earlier than attractiveness. Whereas gender was already analysed 243.9 ms post-stimulus onset, attractiveness came into play 58.6 ms later, i.e. after a post-stimulus onset delay of 302.5 ms. This resulting pattern was mirrored by the analyses of the N200-effect, an effect available mainly frontally which is supposed to correlate with the inhibition of inappropriate responses. Taking the onset of the N200 effect as an estimator for the moment at which information has been processed sufficiently for task decision, we could trace the N200 effect at 152.0 ms for go/nogo-decision on gender, while not as early as 206.7 ms on attractiveness. In sum, processing of facial attractiveness seems to be based on gender-specific aesthetic pre-processing, for instance via activating gender-specific attractiveness prototypes which show focused processing of certain facial aspects.


Swiss Journal of Psychology | 2011

When the Others Matter

Gernot Gerger; Helmut Leder; Stella J. Faerber; Claus-Christian Carbon


Neuropsychologia | 2015

Early temporal negativity is sensitive to perceived (rather than physical) facial identity

Stella J. Faerber; Jürgen M. Kaufmann; Stefan R. Schweinberger


International Journal of Design | 2013

Innovation Is Appreciated When We Feel Safe: On the Situational Dependence of the Appreciation of Innovation

Claus-Christian Carbon; Stella J. Faerber; Gernot Gerger; Michael Forster; Helmut Leder


Research in Engineering Design | 2013

Jump on the innovator’s train: cognitive principles for creating appreciation in innovative product designs

Stella J. Faerber; Claus-Christian Carbon


Cognitive Systems Research | 2013

A cognitive model for predicting esthetical judgements as similarity to dynamic prototypes

Ute Schmid; Michael Siebers; Johannes Folger; Simone Schineller; Dominik Seuí; Marius Raab; Claus-Christian Carbon; Stella J. Faerber

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