ABSTRACT

Although most people are good at face recognition, we are particularly good at recognizing the faces of individuals who share our race, gender, age and species. What factors might account for this type of bias in face recognition? This collection considers the issue of how our identity influences the type of perceptual experience that we have to faces, which, in turn, influences the processes of face recognition. Leading experts from cognitive psychology, neuroscience and computer science address a wide range of topics related to the neural and computational basis of the "own versus other" effect in face recognition, the impact of early experience in infant face recognition, the effect of laboratory training to reverse the other-race effect, cultural differences in expression recognition and the forensic and social consequences of "own versus other" face recognition. The combined work gives the reader a comprehensive overview of the field and an insider’s perspective on the role that identity and experience play in the everyday process of face recognition.

This book was originally published as a special issue of Visual Cognition.

chapter |3 pages

STRUCTURAL FACE ENCODING: THE N170

chapter |2 pages

UNRESOLVED ISSUES

chapter |7 pages

REFERENCES

chapter |18 pages

A BAYESIAN MODEL OF THE OTHER-RACE EFFECT

chapter |4 pages

CONCLUSION

chapter 5|11 pages

Development of own-race biases

Gizelle Anzures, Paul C. Quinn, Olivier Pascalis, Alan M. Slater, and Kang Lee

chapter |7 pages

CONCLUSIONS AND FUTURE DIRECTIONS

chapter |7 pages

Results and discussion

chapter |9 pages

SCRAMBLED/BLURRED TASK

chapter |8 pages

DECODING FACIAL EXPRESSION SIGNALS

chapter |13 pages

Redressing the balance

chapter |5 pages

Results and discussion

chapter |6 pages

Sex differences in face recognition

chapter |12 pages

REFERENCES

chapter |20 pages

Ageing faces in ageing minds: A review on the own-age bias in face recognition

Holger Wiese, Jessica Komes, and Stefan R. Schweinberger

chapter |7 pages

CONCLUSIONS

chapter |3 pages

Towards a synthetic model of own group biases

Steven G. Young

chapter |2 pages

Coda

chapter |1 pages

ELABORATION: PRACTICAL IMPLICATIONS

chapter |1 pages

REFERENCES

chapter |9 pages

Index