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Institution

Université catholique de Louvain

EducationLouvain-la-Neuve, Belgium
About: Université catholique de Louvain is a education organization based out in Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Catalysis. The organization has 25319 authors who have published 57360 publications receiving 2172080 citations. The organization is also known as: University of Louvain & UCLouvain.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The present PET study identifies the anatomical localization of these effects in well-defined regions of the middle fusiform gyri of both hemispheres as a double dissociation between two modes of face processing.
Abstract: Behavioral studies indicate a right hemisphere advantage for processing a face as a whole and a left hemisphere superiority for processing based on face features. The present PET study identifies the anatomical localization of these effects in well-defined regions of the middle fusiform gyri of both hemispheres. The right middle fusiform gyrus, previously described as a face-specific region, was found to be more activated when matching whole faces than face parts whereas this pattern of activity was reversed in the left homologous region. These lateralized differences appeared to be specific to faces since control objects processed either as wholes or parts did not induce any change of activity within these regions. This double dissociation between two modes of face processing brings new evidence regarding the lateralized localization of face individualization mechanisms in the human brain.

433 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is proposed that PKB is part of the insulin signaling cascade for PFK-2 activation in heart and phosphorylated Ser-466 and Ser-483 in the BH1 isoform, but to different extents.

433 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the impact of death-related thoughts on a series of ingroup measures was assessed in an experiment in which participants in the mortality salience condition displayed stronger ingroup identification, perceived greater ingroup entitativily, and scored higher on ingroup bias measures.
Abstract: Merging insights from the intergroup relations literature and terror management theory, the authors conducted an experiment in which they assessed the impact of death-related thoughts on a series of ingroup measures. Participants in the mortality salience condition displayed stronger ingroup identification, perceived greater ingroup entitativily, and scored higher on ingroup bias measures. Also, perceived ingroup entitativily as well as ingroup identification mediated the effect of the mortality salience manipulation on ingroup bias. The findings are discussed in relation to theories of intergroup relations and terror management theory. A new perspective on the function of group belonging also is presented.

433 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that in the context of familiarity decisions without time constraints, differences in processing familiar and unfamiliar faces arise relatively early – immediately upon initiation of the first fixation to identity-specific information – and that the local features of familiar faces are processed more than those of unfamiliar faces.
Abstract: Previous studies recording eye gaze during face perception have rendered somewhat inconclusive findings with respect to fixation differences between familiar and unfamiliar faces. This can be attributed to a number of factors that differ across studies: the type and extent of familiarity with the faces presented, the definition of areas of interest subject to analyses, as well as a lack of consideration for the time course of scan patterns. Here we sought to address these issues by recording fixations in a recognition task with personally familiar and unfamiliar faces. After a first common fixation on a central superior location of the face in between features, suggesting initial holistic encoding, and a subsequent left eye bias, local features were focused and explored more for familiar than unfamiliar faces. Although the number of fixations did not differ for un-/familiar faces, the locations of fixations began to differ before familiarity decisions were provided. This suggests that in the context of familiarity decisions without time constraints, differences in processing familiar and unfamiliar faces arise relatively early - immediately upon initiation of the first fixation to identity-specific information - and that the local features of familiar faces are processed more than those of unfamiliar faces.

433 citations


Authors

Showing all 25540 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Robert Langer2812324326306
Pulickel M. Ajayan1761223136241
Klaus Müllen1642125140748
Giacomo Bruno1581687124368
Willem M. de Vos14867088146
David Goldstein1411301101955
Krzysztof Piotrzkowski141126999607
Andrea Giammanco135136298093
Christophe Delaere135132096742
Vincent Lemaitre134131099190
Michael Tytgat134144994133
Jian Li133286387131
Jost B. Jonas1321158166510
George Stephans132133786865
Peter Hall132164085019
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023147
2022424
20212,952
20202,969
20192,752
20182,676