News:

4/2018 - Alexis Drain is awarded the Loh Tseng Tsai Scholarship. Congrats Alexis!

4/2018 - Amanda, Rachel, & Marissa join the PVL Lab. Welcome!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Jessie Peissig: Publications

Manuscripts Published or In Press


Mitra, S., Gofman, M., Parsons, G., & Peissig, J. (2018). Facial asymmetry versus facial makeup, Proceedings of the 2018 IEEE 8th Annual Computing and Communication Workshop and Conference, 197-203. DOI: 10.1109/CCWC.2018.8301753

Peissig, J. J., Nagasaka, Y., Young, M.E., Wasserman, E.A., & Biederman, I. (2015).  Using the reassignment procedure to test object representation in pigeons and people. Learning and Behavior, 43, 188-207. DOI: 10.3758/s13420-015-0173-2

Balas, B., Peissig, J. J., & Moulson, M. (2015). Children (but not adults) judge similarity in own- and other-race faces by the color of their skin. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 130, 56-66. pdf

Peissig, J. J. (2013). What’s in a face?  It depends on the disorder: A review of Face Recognition and Its Disorders by Sarah Bate. PsycCRITIQUES, 58(46), Article 4. doi: 10.1037/a0034543.

Peissig, J. J. & Goode, T.‡ (2012). How animals recognize rotated objects. Chapter for How Animals See the World: Behavior, Biology, and Evolution of Vision (pp. 233-246). New York, New York, Oxford University Press.

Righi, G., Peissig, J. J., & Tarr, M. J. (2012). Recognizing disguised faces. Visual Cognition, 20(2), 143-169. pdf

Bukach, C. M. & Peissig, J. J. (2010). How faces became special.  In I. Gauthier, M. J. Tarr, & D. Bub (Eds.),  Perceptual Expertise: Bridging Brain and Behavior (pp. 11-39). New York, New York, Oxford University Press.

Kung, C., Peissig, J. J., & Tarr, M. J. (2007). Is region of interest overlap analysis a reliable test of category selectivity? Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 19, 2019-2034. pdf

Peissig, J.J., Singer, J., Kawasaki, K. & Sheinberg, D.L. (2007). Effects of long-term object familiarity on event-related potentials in the monkey. Cerebral Cortex, 17, 1323-1334. pdf

Peissig, J. J. & Tarr, M. J. (2007).  Object recognition:  Do we know more today than we did twenty years ago?  Chapter for Annual Review of Psychology: Volume 58, Palo Alto, CA:  Annual Reviews Press.

Anderson, B., Peissig, J.J., Singer, J. & Sheinberg, D.L. (2006). Configural learning in monkeys using an XOR task. Vision Research, 46, 1804-1815. pdf

Peissig, J.J., Kirpatrick, K., Young, M.E., Wasserman, E.A. & Biederman, I.  (2006). The effects of varying stimulus size on object recognition in pigeons. Journal of Experiment Psychology: Animal Learning and Behavior, 32, 419-430. pdf

Sheinberg D.L., Peissig J.J., Kawasaki K. & Mruczek R.E.B. (2006). Initial saccades predict manual recognition choices in the monkey. Vision Research, 46, 3812-3822. pdf

Peissig, J.J., Young, M.E., Wasserman, E.A., & Biederman, I. (2005). The role of edges in objects recognition by pigeons. Perception, 34, 1353-1374. pdf

Vuong, Q. C., Peissig, J. J., Harrison, M. C., & Tarr, M. J. (2005). The role of surface pigmentation for recognition revealed by contrast reversal in faces and objects. Vision Research, 45, 1213-1223. pdf

Astley, S.L., Peissig, J.J., & Wasserman E.A. (2002). Superordinate Categorization via Learned Stimulus Equivalence: Quantity of Reinforcement, Hedonic Value, and the Nature of the Mediator. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Animal Behavior Processes, 27, 252-268. pdf

Peissig, J.J., Wasserman, E.A., Young, M.E., & Biederman, I. (2002). Learning an object from multiple views enhances its recognition in an orthogonal rotational axis in pigeons. Vision Research, 42, 2051-2062. pdf

Wasserman, E.A., Young, M.E., & Peissig, J. J. (2002). Brief presentations are sufficient for pigeons to to discriminate displays of same and different stimuli. Journal of Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 78, 347-357. pdf

Young, M.E., Peissig, J.J., Wasserman, E.A., & Biederman, I. (2001). Discrimination of Geons by Pigeons: The Effects of Variations in Surface Depiction. Animal Learning and Behavior, 29, 97-106. pdf

Peissig, J.J., Young, M.E., Wasserman, E.A., & Biederman, I. (2000b). Seeing things from a different angle: The pigeon’s discrimination of single geons rotated in depth. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Animal Behavior Processes, 26, 115-132. pdf

Peissig, J.J., Young, M.E., Wasserman, E.A., & Biederman, I. (2000a). The pigeon’s perception of depth-rotated shapes. In J. Fagot (Ed.), Picture Perception in Animals (pp. 37-70). Psychology Press, Ltd, East Sussex, England.

Peissig, J.J., Young, M.E., Wasserman, E.A., & Biederman, I. (1999). The pigeon’s perception of depth-rotated shapes. [Invited paper]. Cahiers de Psychologie (Current Psychology of Cognition), 18, 657-690. [Reprinted in Picture Perception in Animals].