4.6 Article

Mooney face stimuli for visual perception research

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 13, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0200106

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Human Frontier Science Program [LT001118/2012-L]
  2. European Union [706519]
  3. European Community [299372]
  4. Max Planck Society
  5. ERC [640626]
  6. German Research Foundation
  7. Open Access Publication Funds of the Gottingen University

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In 1957, Craig Mooney published a set of human face stimuli to study perceptual closure: the formation of a coherent percept on the basis of minimal visual information. Images of this type, now known as Mooney faces, are widely used in cognitive psychology and neuroscience because they offer a means of inducing variable perception with constant visuospatial characteristics (they are often not perceived as faces if viewed upside down). Mooney's original set of 40 stimuli has been employed in several studies. However, it is often necessary to use a much larger stimulus set. We created a new set of over 500 Mooney faces and tested them on a cohort of human observers. We present the results of our tests here, and make the stimuli freely available via the internet. Our test results can be used to select subsets of the stimuli that are most suited for a given experimental purpose.

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