Activation of the middle fusiform'face area'increases with expertise in recognizing novel objects I Gauthier, MJ Tarr, AW Anderson, P Skudlarski, JC Gore Nature neuroscience 2 (6), 568-573, 1999 | 1656 | 1999 |
Becoming a “Greeble” expert: Exploring mechanisms for face recognition I Gauthier, MJ Tarr Vision research 37 (12), 1673-1682, 1997 | 1321 | 1997 |
Mental rotation and orientation-dependence in shape recognition MJ Tarr, S Pinker Cognitive psychology 21 (2), 233-282, 1989 | 1190 | 1989 |
The fusiform “face area” is part of a network that processes faces at the individual level I Gauthier, MJ Tarr, J Moylan, P Skudlarski, JC Gore, AW Anderson Journal of cognitive neuroscience 12 (3), 495-504, 2000 | 1052 | 2000 |
Early lateralization and orientation tuning for face, word, and object processing in the visual cortex B Rossion, CA Joyce, GW Cottrell, MJ Tarr Neuroimage 20 (3), 1609-1624, 2003 | 971 | 2003 |
The N170 occipito-temporal component is delayed and enhanced to inverted faces but not to inverted objects: an electrophysiological account of face-specific processes in the … B Rossion, I Gauthier, MJ Tarr, P Despland, R Bruyer, S Linotte, ... Neuroreport 11 (1), 69-72, 2000 | 946 | 2000 |
FFA: a flexible fusiform area for subordinate-level visual processing automatized by expertise MJ Tarr, I Gauthier Nature neuroscience 3 (8), 764-769, 2000 | 900 | 2000 |
Rotating objects to recognize them: A case study on the role of viewpoint dependency in the recognition of three-dimensional objects MJ Tarr Psychonomic Bulletin & Review 2, 55-82, 1995 | 656 | 1995 |
Image-based object recognition in man, monkey and machine MJ Tarr, HH Bülthoff Cognition 67 (1-2), 1-20, 1998 | 625 | 1998 |
Training ‘greeble’experts: a framework for studying expert object recognition processes I Gauthier, P Williams, MJ Tarr, J Tanaka Vision research 38 (15-16), 2401-2428, 1998 | 588 | 1998 |
Do humans integrate routes into a cognitive map? Map-versus landmark-based navigation of novel shortcuts. P Foo, WH Warren, A Duchon, MJ Tarr Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition 31 (2), 195, 2005 | 559 | 2005 |
Is human object recognition better described by geon structural descriptions or by multiple views? Comment on Biederman and Gerhardstein (1993). MJ Tarr, HH Bülthoff American Psychological Association 21 (6), 1494, 1995 | 558 | 1995 |
Unraveling mechanisms for expert object recognition: bridging brain activity and behavior. I Gauthier, MJ Tarr Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance 28 (2), 431, 2002 | 548 | 2002 |
How are three-dimensional objects represented in the brain? HH Bülthoff, SY Edelman, MJ Tarr Cerebral Cortex 5 (3), 247-260, 1995 | 532 | 1995 |
Can face recognition really be dissociated from object recognition? I Gauthier, M Behrmann, MJ Tarr Journal of cognitive neuroscience 11 (4), 349-370, 1999 | 448 | 1999 |
Virtual reality in behavioral neuroscience and beyond MJ Tarr, WH Warren Nature neuroscience 5 (Suppl 11), 1089-1092, 2002 | 433 | 2002 |
Beyond faces and modularity: the power of an expertise framework CM Bukach, I Gauthier, MJ Tarr Trends in cognitive sciences 10 (4), 159-166, 2006 | 428 | 2006 |
Expertise training with novel objects leads to left-lateralized facelike electrophysiological responses B Rossion, I Gauthier, V Goffaux, MJ Tarr, M Crommelinck Psychological science 13 (3), 250-257, 2002 | 417 | 2002 |
Three-dimensional object recognition is viewpoint dependent MJ Tarr, P Williams, WG Hayward, I Gauthier Nature neuroscience 1 (4), 275-277, 1998 | 416 | 1998 |
Spatial language and spatial representation WG Hayward, MJ Tarr Cognition 55 (1), 39-84, 1995 | 409 | 1995 |