I. Gauthier, M. J. Tarr, J. Moylan, A. W. Anderson, P. Skudlarski, and J. C. Gore, "Does Visual Subordinate-level Categorization Engage the Functionally Defined Fusiform Face Area?," Cognitive Neuropsychology, vol. 17, pp. 143-163, 2000.

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A Biologically Plausible Approach to Cat and Dog - Discrimination Bruce Draper   (Correct)

....people recognize faces they have never seen before as being human faces. At the same time, people almost instantly recognize the identity of familiar faces. Gauthier and Tarr use this multiplelevel categorization as the defining characteristic of expert object recognition in their greeble studies [13], and it is a critical property of expert object recognition: objects are identified at both the class and instance level. Expert object recognition is also very fast. While fMRI and PET studies do not give timing information, face recognition in humans can also be detected in ERP studies through ....

I. Gauthier, M. J. Tarr, J. Moylan, A. W. Anderson, P. Skudlarski, and J. C. Gore, "Does Visual Subordinate-level Categorization Engage the Functionally Defined Fusiform Face Area?," Cognitive Neuropsychology, vol. 17, pp. 143-163, 2000.

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