Holger Wiese

Holger Wiese

Durham University

H-index: 31

Europe-United Kingdom

About Holger Wiese

Holger Wiese, With an exceptional h-index of 31 and a recent h-index of 21 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at Durham University, specializes in the field of Face recognition, face perception, recognition memory, event-related potentials.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

How neural representations of newly learnt faces change over time: Event-related brain potential evidence for overnight consolidation

Personal familiarity of faces, animals, objects, and scenes: Distinct perceptual and overlapping conceptual representations

The role of the eye region for neural correlates of familiar face recognition: The N250r reveals no evidence for eye-centred face representations

Developing familiarity during the first eight months of knowing a person: A longitudinal EEG study on face and identity learning

Event‐related brain potential correlates of the other‐race effect: A review

The role of the eye region for familiar face recognition: Evidence from spatial low-pass filtering and contrast negation

How quickly do we learn new faces in everyday life? Neurophysiological evidence for face identity learning after a brief real-life encounter

Characterizing the shared signals of face familiarity: long-term acquaintance, voluntary control, and concealed knowledge

Holger Wiese Information

University

Position

___

Citations(all)

3048

Citations(since 2020)

1272

Cited By

2289

hIndex(all)

31

hIndex(since 2020)

21

i10Index(all)

53

i10Index(since 2020)

38

Email

University Profile Page

Google Scholar

Holger Wiese Skills & Research Interests

Face recognition

face perception

recognition memory

event-related potentials

Top articles of Holger Wiese

How neural representations of newly learnt faces change over time: Event-related brain potential evidence for overnight consolidation

cortex

2024/2/1

Holger Wiese
Holger Wiese

H-Index: 22

Personal familiarity of faces, animals, objects, and scenes: Distinct perceptual and overlapping conceptual representations

Cognition

2023/12/1

Holger Wiese
Holger Wiese

H-Index: 22

The role of the eye region for neural correlates of familiar face recognition: The N250r reveals no evidence for eye-centred face representations

Visual Cognition

2023/8/9

Holger Wiese
Holger Wiese

H-Index: 22

Developing familiarity during the first eight months of knowing a person: A longitudinal EEG study on face and identity learning

cortex

2023/8/1

Holger Wiese
Holger Wiese

H-Index: 22

Event‐related brain potential correlates of the other‐race effect: A review

2023/5

Holger Wiese
Holger Wiese

H-Index: 22

The role of the eye region for familiar face recognition: Evidence from spatial low-pass filtering and contrast negation

Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology

2023/2

Holger Wiese
Holger Wiese

H-Index: 22

How quickly do we learn new faces in everyday life? Neurophysiological evidence for face identity learning after a brief real-life encounter

Cortex

2022/12/27

Holger Wiese
Holger Wiese

H-Index: 22

Characterizing the shared signals of face familiarity: long-term acquaintance, voluntary control, and concealed knowledge

Brain Research

2022/12/1

Holger Wiese
Holger Wiese

H-Index: 22

Géza Gergely Ambrus
Géza Gergely Ambrus

H-Index: 18

Familiarity is familiarity is familiarity: Event-related brain potentials reveal qualitatively similar representations of personally familiar and famous faces.

Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition

2022/8

Holger Wiese
Holger Wiese

H-Index: 22

The time it takes to truly know someone: Neurophysiological correlates of face and identity learning during the first two years

Biological Psychology

2022/4/1

Holger Wiese
Holger Wiese

H-Index: 22

Detecting a viewer’s familiarity with a face: Evidence from event‐related brain potentials and classifier analyses

Psychophysiology

2022/1

Holger Wiese
Holger Wiese

H-Index: 22

Recognising other-race faces is more effortful: The effect of individuation instructions on encoding-related ERP Dm effects

Biological Psychology

2021/1/1

Holger Wiese
Holger Wiese

H-Index: 22

Neural correlates of own-and other-face perception in body dysmorphic disorder

Frontiers in psychiatry

2020/4/24

Holger Wiese
Holger Wiese

H-Index: 22

Intentionally remembering or forgetting own‐and other‐race faces: Evidence from directed forgetting

British Journal of Psychology

2020/8

Holger Wiese
Holger Wiese

H-Index: 22

See List of Professors in Holger Wiese University(Durham University)

Co-Authors

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