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Aurélie Porcheron
Researcher at University of Grenoble
Publications - 20
Citations - 251
Aurélie Porcheron is an academic researcher from University of Grenoble. The author has contributed to research in topics: Contrast (vision) & Face perception. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 19 publications receiving 181 citations. Previous affiliations of Aurélie Porcheron include Pierre Mendès-France University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Coloration in different areas of facial skin is a cue to health: The role of cheek redness and periorbital luminance in health perception.
TL;DR: Findings show that color variation in facial skin is a cue for health perception in female faces, with low periorbital luminance more negatively affecting perceptions.
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Facial contrast is a cue for perceiving health from the face.
Richard Russell,Aurélie Porcheron,Jennifer R. Sweda,Alex L. Jones,Emmanuelle Mauger,Frédérique Morizot +5 more
TL;DR: Evidence is reported that facial contrast-the luminance and color contrast between internal facial features and the surrounding skin-is a cue for the perception of health from the face, and this finding helps to ground the understanding of perceived health in terms of lower-level perceptual features such as contrast.
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Sclera Color Changes with Age and is a Cue for Perceiving Age, Health, and Beauty
TL;DR: It is reported that the color of the sclera is related to age in a large sample of adult Caucasian females, and older faces have sClera that are more dark, red, and yellow than younger faces.
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Differential effects of makeup on perceived age.
Richard Russell,Carlota Batres,Sandra Courrèges,Gwenaël Kaminski,Gwenaël Kaminski,Frédérique Soppelsa,Frédérique Morizot,Aurélie Porcheron +7 more
TL;DR: It is proposed that makeup affects social perceptions through bottom-up routes, by modifying visual cues such as facial contrast, facial feature size, and skin homogeneity, and also through top-down routes,By activating social representations and norms associated with makeup use.
Journal ArticleDOI
Facial Contrast Is a Cross-Cultural Cue for Perceiving Age.
Aurélie Porcheron,Emmanuelle Mauger,Frédérique Soppelsa,Yuli Liu,Liezhong Ge,Olivier Pascalis,Richard Russell,Frédérique Morizot +7 more
TL;DR: Because cosmetics were shown to enhance facial contrast, this work provides some support for the notion that a universal function of cosmetics is to make female faces look younger, and indicates that facial contrast is a cross-cultural cue to youthfulness.