Bourgaux, L., Rekow, D., Leleu, A., & de Heering, A. (submitted). Context matters: Human faces hinder face pareidolia.
2 / Cerebral Cortex
Quek, G.L., & de Heering, A. (2024). Visual periodicity reveals distinct attentional signatures for face and non-face categories.
3 / Frontiers in Psychology
Bertels, J., de Heering, A., Bourguignon, M., Cleeremans, A., & Destrebecqz, A. (2023). What determines the neural response to snakes? A systematic comparison of color and grayscale stimuli.
4 / Neuroimage
Kabdebon, C., Flo, A., de Heering, A., & Aslin, D. (2022). The power of rhythms: how neural entrainment reveals neurocognitive development.
5 / PlosOne
Beauny, A., de Heering, A., Muñoz Moldes, S., Martin, J.R., de Beir, A., & Cleeremans, A. (2020). Unconscious categorization of sub-millisecond complex images.
6 / Scientific Reports
Bertels, J., Bourguignon, M., de Heering, A., Chetail, F., De Tiège, X., Cleeremans, A., & Destrebecqz, A. (2020). Specific neural responses to snakes in the infant’s brain.
7 / Trends in Cognitive Sciences
Cleeremans, A., Achoui, D., Beauny, A., Keuninckx, L., Martin, J.R., Munoz-Moldes, S., Vuillaume, L., & de Heering, A. (2020). Learning to be conscious.
8 / Neuropsychologia
Lochy, A., de Heering, A., & Rossion, B. (2019). The non-linear development of the right hemispheric specialization for human face perception.
9 / Cognition
de Heering, A., & Kolinsky, R. (2019). Braille readers break mirror invariance for both visual Braille and Latin letters.
10 / i-Perception
Barilari, M., de Heering, A., Crollen, V., Collignon, O., & Bottini, R. (2018). Is red heavier than yellow even for blind?
11 / Cortex
de Heering, A., Collignon, O., & Kolinsky (2018). Blind readers break mirror invariance as sighted do.
12 / Developmental Science
Rhodes, G., Nishimura, M., de Heering, A., Jeffery, L., & Maurer, D. (2017). Reduced adaptability, but no fundamental disruption, of norm-based face-coding mechanisms following early visual deprivation from congenital cataracts.
13 / Current Biology
de Heering, A., Dormal, G., Pelland, M., Lewis, T.L., Maurer, D., & Collignon, O. (2016). A brief period of postnatal visual deprivation alters the balance between auditory and visual attention.
14 / Developmental Psychobiology
de Heering, A., Goffaux, V., Dollion, N., Godard, O., Durand, K., & Baudouin, J.Y. (2016). Three-month-old infants’ sensitivity to horizontal information within faces.
15 / Current Biology
Collignon, O., Dormal, G., de Heering, A., Lepore, F., Lewis, T., & Maurer, D. (2015). Long-Lasting Crossmodal Cortical Reorganization Triggered by Brief Postnatal Visual Deprivation.
16 / eLife
de Heering, A., & Rossion, B. (2015). Rapid Categorization of Natural Face Images in the Infant Right Hemisphere.
17 / Ecological Psychology
de Heering, A., Bracovic, A., & Maurer, D. (2014). Starting School Improves Preschoolers’ Ability to Discriminate Child Faces.
18 / Vision Research
de Heering, A., & Maurer, D. (2013). The Effects of Spatial Frequency on Perceptual Learning of Inverted Faces.
19 / International Journal of Behavioral Development
de Heering, A., & Schiltz, C. (2013). Sensitivity to spacing information increases more for the eye region than for the mouth region during childhood.
20 / Developmental Psychobiology
de Heering, A., & Maurer, D. (2012). Face memory deficits in patients deprived of early visual inputs by bilateral congenital cataracts.
21 / Perception
de Heering, A., Wallis, J., & Maurer, D. (2012). The Composite Face Effect Survives Abnormal Asymmetric Distortions.
22 / Frontiers in Perception Science
de Heering, A., Aljuhanay, A., Rossion, B., & Pascalis, O. (2012). Early Deafness Increases the Face Inversion Effect and Does not Modulate the Composite Face Effect.
23 / Cognitive Development
de Heering, A., Rossion, B., & Maurer, D. (2012). Developmental Changes in Face Recognition During Childhood: Evidence from Upright and Inverted Faces.
24 / Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
Kuefner, D., de Heering, A., Jacques, C., Palmero-Soler, E., & Rossion, B. (2010). Early visually evoked electrophysiological responses over the human brain (P1, N170) show stable patterns of face-sensitivity from 4 years to adulthood.
25 / Developmental Science
de Heering, A., de Liedekerke, C., Deboni, M., & Rossion, B. (2010). The role of experience during childhood in shaping the other-race face effect.
26 / Enfance
de Heering, A. (2010). La boîte à outils du développementaliste : Comment comprendre le monde visuel des enfants?
27 / PlosOne
de Heering, A., & Rossion, B. (2008). Prolonged visual experience in adulthood modulates perceptual face processes.
28 / Journal of Neuropsychology
de Heering, A., Rossion, B., Turati, C., & Simion, F. (2008). Holistic face processing can be independent of gaze behavior: Evidence from the face composite effect.
29 / Cognition
de Heering, A., Turati, C., Rossion, B., Bulf, H., Goffaux, V., & Simion, F. (2008). Newborns' face recognition is based on spatial frequencies below 0.5 cycles per degree.
30 / Journal of Experimental Child Psychology,
de Heering, A., Houthuys, S., & Rossion, B. (2007). Holistic face processing is mature at 4 years of age: evidence from the composite face effect.