HIGHLIGHTS
SUMMARY
At the behavioral level, this phenomenon is brought by forward masking (inhibition)/priming (facilitation)/adaptation (biased perception) (Walther et_al, 2013; Mueller et_al, 2020 for a review). Previous research has reported that face aftereffects persist even when the aftereffects of low-level visual features collapse (Leopold et_al, 2001; Rhodes et_al, 2007 in face identity; Hsu and Young, 2004; Burton et_al, 2016; Zamuner et_al, 2017 in facial expressions). With regard to temporal dynamics, there is a close relationship between the amount of face aftereffect and the presentation time: the increasing duration of the exposure to the . . .
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