2008
DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2007.04.002
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An own-race advantage for components as well as configurations in face recognition

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Cited by 146 publications
(159 citation statements)
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References 25 publications
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“…Finally, there was little benefit of contact experience for our Chinese participants in judging the gender of Chinese faces, except for scrambled faces in Experiment 2, which is consistent with recent findings that contact experience with own-race faces helps with the analysis of scrambled faces (Hayward et al, 2008). A benefit for categorizing the gender of own-race normal upright faces has previously been shown by O'Toole, Peterson, and Deffenbacher (1996).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 77%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Finally, there was little benefit of contact experience for our Chinese participants in judging the gender of Chinese faces, except for scrambled faces in Experiment 2, which is consistent with recent findings that contact experience with own-race faces helps with the analysis of scrambled faces (Hayward et al, 2008). A benefit for categorizing the gender of own-race normal upright faces has previously been shown by O'Toole, Peterson, and Deffenbacher (1996).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 77%
“…In addition, this study does not rule out a role for other forms of componential face processing, such as that derived from principal component analysis (e.g., Valentin, Abdi, Edelman, & O'Toole, 1997). Consistent with studies of part-based identity processing (e.g., Hayward, Rhodes, & Schwaninger, 2008;Schwaninger et al, 2002), gender recognition based on face components (i.e., scrambled face parts) was also better than chance. However, the present study indicates that part-based processing is modulated by holistic processing of the face, even for gender perception.…”
Section: Experiments 1: Upright Versus Inverted Facessupporting
confidence: 67%
“…Several studies have suggested that two kinds of face representations are coded in face perception: configural and featural representations (e.g., Bartlett, Searcy, & Abdi, 2003;Cabeza & Kato, 2000;Collishaw & Hole, 2000;Hayward, Rhodes, & Schwaninger, 2008;Leder & Bruce, 1998;Schwaninger, Lobmaier, & Collishaw, 2002; for an overview see Schwaninger et al, 2003Schwaninger et al, , 2006. But are these representations independent of each other?…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An interesting open question is whether this part decomposition contribution derives from general object recognition mechanisms or from a part decomposition module or stage specifically within the face recognition system. A recent finding that the other-race effect (poorer memory for other-than for own-race faces) occurs for isolated position-scrambled face parts (Hayward, Rhodes, & Schwaninger, 2008) is suggestive that part decomposition might occur within the face system (although note that the result could also derive from a general familiarity effect within the object recognition system).…”
Section: A Twofold Contribution Of Face Parts To Face Recognition?mentioning
confidence: 99%