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Face Recognition

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face recognition

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with face recognition across World Wide.
14 curated items14 Seminars
Updated 5 months ago
14 items · face recognition
14 results
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Vision Unveiled: Understanding Face Perception in Children Treated for Congenital Blindness

Sharon Gilad-Gutnick
MIT
Jun 19, 2023

Despite her still poor visual acuity and minimal visual experience, a 2-3 month old baby will reliably respond to facial expressions, smiling back at her caretaker or older sibling. But what if that same baby had been deprived of her early visual experience? Will she be able to appropriately respond to seemingly mundane interactions, such as a peer’s facial expression, if she begins seeing at the age of 10? My work is part of Project Prakash, a dual humanitarian/scientific mission to identify and treat curably blind children in India and then study how their brain learns to make sense of the visual world when their visual journey begins late in life. In my talk, I will give a brief overview of Project Prakash, and present findings from one of my primary lines of research: plasticity of face perception with late sight onset. Specifically, I will discuss a mixed methods effort to probe and explain the differential windows of plasticity that we find across different aspects of distributed face recognition, from distinguishing a face from a nonface early in the developmental trajectory, to recognizing facial expressions, identifying individuals, and even identifying one’s own caretaker. I will draw connections between our empirical findings and our recent theoretical work hypothesizing that children with late sight onset may suffer persistent face identification difficulties because of the unusual acuity progression they experience relative to typically developing infants. Finally, time permitting, I will point to potential implications of our findings in supporting newly-sighted children as they transition back into society and school, given that their needs and possibilities significantly change upon the introduction of vision into their lives.

SeminarPsychology

Understanding and Mitigating Bias in Human & Machine Face Recognition

John Howard
Maryland Test Facility
Apr 11, 2023

With the increasing use of automated face recognition (AFR) technologies, it is important to consider whether these systems not only perform accurately, but also equitability or without “bias”. Despite rising public, media, and scientific attention to this issue, the sources of bias in AFR are not fully understood. This talk will explore how human cognitive biases may impact our assessments of performance differentials in AFR systems and our subsequent use of those systems to make decisions. We’ll also show how, if we adjust our definition of what a “biased” AFR algorithm looks like, we may be able to create algorithms that optimize the performance of a human+algorithm team, not simply the algorithm itself.

SeminarNeuroscience

New Insights into the Neural Machinery of Face Recognition

Winrich Freiwald
Rockefeller
Jul 11, 2022
SeminarPsychology

Forensic use of face recognition systems for investigation

Maëlig Jacquet
University of Lausanne
Apr 10, 2022

With the increasing development of automatic systems and artificial intelligence, face recognition is becoming increasingly important in forensic and civil contexts. However, face recognition has yet to be thoroughly empirically studied to provide an adequate scientific and legal framework for investigative and court purposes. This observation sets the foundation for the research. We focus on issues related to face images and the use of automatic systems. Our objective is to validate a likelihood ratio computation methodology for interpreting comparison scores from automatic face recognition systems (score-based likelihood ratio, SLR). We collected three types of traces: portraits (ID), video surveillance footage recorded by ATM and by a wide-angle camera (CCTV). The performance of two automatic face recognition systems is compared: the commercial IDEMIA Morphoface (MFE) system and the open source FaceNet algorithm.

SeminarPsychology

Characterising the brain representations behind variations in real-world visual behaviour

Simon Faghel-Soubeyrand
Université de Montréal
Aug 4, 2021

Not all individuals are equally competent at recognizing the faces they interact with. Revealing how the brains of different individuals support variations in this ability is a crucial step to develop an understanding of real-world human visual behaviour. In this talk, I will present findings from a large high-density EEG dataset (>100k trials of participants processing various stimulus categories) and computational approaches which aimed to characterise the brain representations behind real-world proficiency of “super-recognizers”—individuals at the top of face recognition ability spectrum. Using decoding analysis of time-resolved EEG patterns, we predicted with high precision the trial-by-trial activity of super-recognizers participants, and showed that evidence for face recognition ability variations is disseminated along early, intermediate and late brain processing steps. Computational modeling of the underlying brain activity uncovered two representational signatures supporting higher face recognition ability—i) mid-level visual & ii) semantic computations. Both components were dissociable in brain processing-time (the first around the N170, the last around the P600) and levels of computations (the first emerging from mid-level layers of visual Convolutional Neural Networks, the last from a semantic model characterising sentence descriptions of images). I will conclude by presenting ongoing analyses from a well-known case of acquired prosopagnosia (PS) using similar computational modeling of high-density EEG activity.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Face distortions as a window into face perception

Brad Duchaine
Dartmouth
Aug 2, 2021

Prosopometamorphopsia (PMO) is a disorder characterized by face perception distortions. People with PMO see facial features that appear to melt, stretch, and change size and position. I'll discuss research on PMO carried out by my lab and others that sheds light on the cognitive and neural organization of face perception. https://facedistortion.faceblind.org/

SeminarPsychology

Investigating visual recognition and the temporal lobes using electrophysiology and fast periodic visual stimulation

Angelique Volfart
University of Louvain
Jun 23, 2021

The ventral visual pathway extends from the occipital to the anterior temporal regions, and is specialized in giving meaning to objects and people that are perceived through vision. Numerous studies in functional magnetic resonance imaging have focused on the cerebral basis of visual recognition. However, this technique is susceptible to magnetic artefacts in ventral anterior temporal regions and it has led to an underestimation of the role of these regions within the ventral visual stream, especially with respect to face recognition and semantic representations. Moreover, there is an increasing need for implicit methods assessing these functions as explicit tasks lack specificity. In this talk, I will present three studies using fast periodic visual stimulation (FPVS) in combination with scalp and/or intracerebral EEG to overcome these limitations and provide high SNR in temporal regions. I will show that, beyond face recognition, FPVS can be extended to investigate semantic representations using a face-name association paradigm and a semantic categorisation paradigm with written words. These results shed new light on the role of temporal regions and demonstrate the high potential of the FPVS approach as a powerful electrophysiological tool to assess various cognitive functions in neurotypical and clinical populations.

SeminarPsychology

Getting to know you: emerging neural representations during face familiarization

Gyula Kovács
Friedrich-Schiller University Jena
Jun 16, 2021

The successful recognition of familiar persons is critical for social interactions. Despite extensive research on the neural representations of familiar faces, we know little about how such representations unfold as someone becomes familiar. In three EEG experiments, we elucidated how representations of face familiarity and identity emerge from different qualities of familiarization: brief perceptual exposure (Experiment 1), extensive media familiarization (Experiment 2) and real-life personal familiarization (Experiment 3). Time-resolved representational similarity analysis revealed that familiarization quality has a profound impact on representations of face familiarity: they were strongly visible after personal familiarization, weaker after media familiarization, and absent after perceptual familiarization. Across all experiments, we found no enhancement of face identity representation, suggesting that familiarity and identity representations emerge independently during face familiarization. Our results emphasize the importance of extensive, real-life familiarization for the emergence of robust face familiarity representations, constraining models of face perception and recognition memory.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

How do humans recognise faces? Insights from biological and artificial face recognition systems

Galit Yovel
Tel Aviv Univ.
Mar 1, 2021
SeminarPsychology

Algorithmic advances in face matching: Stability of tests in atypical groups

Mirta Stantic
Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford
Feb 17, 2021

Face matching tests have traditionally been developed to assess human face perception in the neurotypical range, but methods that underlie their development often make it difficult for these measures to be applied in atypical populations (developmental prosopagnosics, super recognizers) due to unadjusted difficulty. We have recently presented the development of the Oxford Face Matching Test, a measure that bases individual item-difficulty on algorithmically derived similarity of presented stimuli. The measure seems useful as it can be given online or in-laboratory, has good discriminability and high test-retest reliability in the neurotypical groups. In addition, it has good validity in separating atypical groups at either of the spectrum ends. In this talk, I examine the stability of the OFMT and other traditionally used measures in atypical groups. On top of the theoretical significance of determining whether reliability of tests is equivalent in atypical population, this is an important question because of the practical concerns of retesting the same participants across different lab groups. Theoretical and practical implications for further test development and data sharing are discussed.

SeminarNeuroscience

The neural basis of human face identity recognition

Bruno Rossion
Université de Lorraine
Jan 18, 2021

The face is the primary source of information for recognizing the identity of people around us, but the neural basis of this astonishing ability remains largely unknown. In this presentation, I will define the fundamental problem of face identity recognition, arguing that there is a specific expertise of the human species at this function. I will then attempt to integrate a large corpus of observations from lesion studies, neuroimaging, human intracerebral recordings and stimulation into a coherent framework to shed light on the neural mechanisms of human face identity recognition.

SeminarNeuroscience

A computational explanation for domain specificity in the human brain

Katharina Dobs
University Giessen
Nov 24, 2020

Many regions of the human brain conduct highly specific functions, such as recognizing faces, understanding language, and thinking about other people’s thoughts. Why might this domain specific organization be a good design strategy for brains, and what is the origin of domain specificity in the first place? In this talk, I will present recent work testing whether the segregation of face and object perception in human brains emerges naturally from an optimization for both tasks. We trained artificial neural networks on face and object recognition, and found that networks were able to perform both tasks well by spontaneously segregating them into distinct pathways. Critically, networks neither had prior knowledge nor any inductive bias about the tasks. Furthermore, networks optimized on tasks which apparently do not develop specialization in the human brain, such as food or cars, and object categorization showed less task segregation. These results suggest that functional segregation can spontaneously emerge without a task-specific bias, and that the domain-specific organization of the cortex may reflect a computational optimization for the real-world tasks humans solve.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Super-Recognizers: facts, fallacies, and the future

Meike Ramon
University of Fribourg
Aug 3, 2020

Over the past decade, the domain of face identity processing has seen a surging interest in inter-individual differences, with a focus on individuals with superior skills, so-called Super-Recognizers (SRs; Ramon et al., 2019; Russell et al., 2009). Their study can provide valuable insights into brain-behavior relationships and advance our understanding of neural functioning. Despite a decade of research, and similarly to the field of developmental prosopagnosia, a consensus on diagnostic criteria for SR identification is lacking. Consequently, SRs are currently identified either inconsistently, via suboptimal individual tests, or via undocumented collections of tests. This state of the field has two major implications. Firstly, our scientific understanding of SRs will remain at best limited. Secondly, the needs of government agencies interested in deploying SRs for real-life identity verification (e.g., policing) are unlikely to be met. To counteract these issues, I suggest the following action points. Firstly, based on our and others’ work suggesting novel and challenging tests of face cognition (Bobak et al., 2019; Fysh et al., in press; Stacchi et al., 2019), and my collaborations with international security agencies, I recommend novel diagnostic criteria for SR identification. These are currently being used to screen the Berlin State Police’s >25K employees before identifying SRs via bespoke testing procedures we have collaboratively developed over the past years. Secondly, I introduce a cohort of SRs identified using these criteria, which is being studied in-depth using behavioral methods, psychophysics, eye-tracking, and neuroimaging. Finally, I suggest data acquired for these individuals should be curated to develop and share best practices with researchers and practitioners, and to gain an accurate and transparent description of SR cases to exploit their informative value.