“…Although humans discriminate between human faces better than any other type of object (Werner, Kühnel, & Markowitsch, 2013), there are a number of other examples where facial-identity judgments are not immune to low-level influences. For example, there appears to be a relationship between facial processing and the location of a stimulus in an observer’s visual field, such that there is an advantage in facial processing in the upper visual fields compared to lower visual fields (Carlei, Framorando, Burra, & Kerzel, 2017; Felisberti & Currie, 2019; Felisberti & McDermott, 2013; Hagenbeck & Van Strien, 2002), and for faces processed centrally compared to in the periphery (Levy, Hasson, Avidan, Hendler, & Malach, 2001). The perceived gender of a face can even be biased by its visual field location (Afraz, Pashkam, & Cavanagh, 2010).…”