2002
DOI: 10.1016/s0042-6989(02)00362-0
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Synthetic faces, face cubes, and the geometry of face space

Abstract: To simplify the study of visual face processing, we introduce a novel class of synthetic face stimuli based upon 37 measurements (head shape, feature locations, etc.) extracted from individual face photographs in both frontal and 20 degrees side views. Synthetic faces are bandpass filtered optimally for face perception and include both line and edge information. Pilot experiments establish that subjects are extremely accurate in matching a synthetic face with the original grayscale photograph, even across view… Show more

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Cited by 152 publications
(206 citation statements)
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“…That same approach would likely fail with face stimuli because the representational space is clearly anisotropic. For example, the difference threshold for discriminating between faces varies substantially from one region of face space to another, with smallest difference thresholds in the neighborhood of the average face (Wilson et al, 2002). To permit full expression of potential anisotropies, we used nonmetric MDS to characterize the perceptual space within which our face stimuli were located and to quantify the distances between faces in that space.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…That same approach would likely fail with face stimuli because the representational space is clearly anisotropic. For example, the difference threshold for discriminating between faces varies substantially from one region of face space to another, with smallest difference thresholds in the neighborhood of the average face (Wilson et al, 2002). To permit full expression of potential anisotropies, we used nonmetric MDS to characterize the perceptual space within which our face stimuli were located and to quantify the distances between faces in that space.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We chose to work with realistic, synthetic human faces generated using methods introduced by Wilson, Loffler, and Wilkinson (2002). As test stimuli, Wilson faces mitigate problems arising from the availability of nonfacial information or from the availability of distinctive featural differences among faces (e.g., Duchaine & Weidenfeld, 2003;Sadr, Jarudi, & Sinha, 2003).…”
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confidence: 99%
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“…Human faces are one obvious example of such stimuli, but if this proposed study were carried out, it would be crucial to use faces whose metric properties could be controlled in a metric fashion, as we did with compound gratings. Wilson, Loffler, and Wilkinson (2002) recently introduced novel computer-synthesized human faces that seem quite suitable for this purpose.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…
A new parametric method for generating synthetic faces is proposed in this study which could be used for psychophysics studies on face perception [1]. Two separate programs, one in Delphi 2005 programming environment and another in MATLAB ® is developed to sample real faces and generating synthetic faces respectively.
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confidence: 99%