Young children's difficulty in disregarding information from external features when matching unfamiliar faces

被引:1
作者
Sugimura, Tomoko [1 ]
机构
[1] Fukuoka Univ Educ, Dept Educ Psychol, Munakata, Fukuoka 8114192, Japan
关键词
Internal face; External face; Matching task; Young children; Disregarding; Eye movement; EYE-MOVEMENTS; CONFIGURAL INFORMATION; DEVELOPMENTAL-CHANGES; EXECUTIVE FUNCTION; RECOGNITION; FAMILIAR; INNER; IDENTIFICATION; ADVANTAGE; SEX;
D O I
10.1016/j.jecp.2013.06.011
中图分类号
B844 [发展心理学(人类心理学)];
学科分类号
040202 ;
摘要
Three experiments were conducted to examine developmental differences in reliance on internal (i.e., eyes, nose, mouth, and cheeks) or external (i.e., hairstyle) facial features between young children and adults when matching two unfamiliar faces. Participants viewed two facial images and were asked to decide whether the images showed the identical person or two different people. Four different types of stimuli were presented: two incongruent stimuli, in which the two images showed either the same internal face (i.e., same person) with different hairstyles or two different internal faces (i.e., different people) with the same hairstyle, and two congruent stimuli, in which the two images showed either the same face and hairstyle or two different faces and hairstyles. We found that children were more likely to base their responses on external hairstyles for the incongruent stimuli, unlike adults (Experiment 1), even when they were instructed to attend to internal features (Experiment 2). Eye movement data showed that both children and adults spent the most time gazing on the internal features and gave little attention to the external hairstyle, and children attended to each part of the internal features as long as, or even longer than, adults (Experiment 3). Children's response based on external hairstyles was due to their inability to disregard external information and was not attributed to their tendency to attend more frequently to external parts rather than internal parts. (C) 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:296 / 308
页数:13
相关论文
共 39 条
[1]   Eye movements do not reflect retrieval processes - Limits of the eye-mind hypothesis [J].
Anderson, JR ;
Bothell, D ;
Douglass, S .
PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 2004, 15 (04) :225-231
[2]   Gaze behavior in face comparison: The roles of sex, task, and symmetry [J].
Armann, Regine ;
Buelthoff, Isabelle .
ATTENTION PERCEPTION & PSYCHOPHYSICS, 2009, 71 (05) :1107-1126
[3]   THE DEVELOPMENT OF FACE RECOGNITION - FEATURAL OR CONFIGURATIONAL PROCESSING [J].
BAENNINGER, M .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL CHILD PSYCHOLOGY, 1994, 57 (03) :377-396
[4]   Configural information in gender categorisation [J].
Baudouin, JY ;
Humphreys, GW .
PERCEPTION, 2006, 35 (04) :531-540
[5]   Extremely Selective Attention: Eye-Tracking Studies of the Dynamic Allocation of Attention to Stimulus Features in Categorization [J].
Blair, Mark R. ;
Watson, Marcus R. ;
Walshe, R. Calen ;
Maj, Fillip .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-LEARNING MEMORY AND COGNITION, 2009, 35 (05) :1196-1206
[6]   Configural information in facial expression perception [J].
Calder, AJ ;
Young, AW ;
Keane, J ;
Dean, M .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-HUMAN PERCEPTION AND PERFORMANCE, 2000, 26 (02) :527-551
[7]   THE DEVELOPMENT OF DIFFERENTIAL USE OF INNER AND OUTER FACE FEATURES IN FAMILIAR FACE IDENTIFICATION [J].
CAMPBELL, R ;
WALKER, J ;
BARONCOHEN, S .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL CHILD PSYCHOLOGY, 1995, 59 (02) :196-210
[8]   When does the inner-face advantage in familiar face recognition arise and why? [J].
Campbell, R ;
Coleman, M ;
Walker, J ;
Benson, PJ ;
Wallace, S ;
Michelotti, J ;
Baron-Cohen, S .
VISUAL COGNITION, 1999, 6 (02) :197-216
[9]   Developmentally sensitive measures of executive function in preschool children [J].
Carlson, SA .
DEVELOPMENTAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGY, 2005, 28 (02) :595-616
[10]   Holistic processing for faces and cars in preschool-aged children and adults: evidence from the composite effect [J].
Cassia, Viola Macchi ;
Picozzi, Marta ;
Kuefner, Dana ;
Bricolo, Emanuela ;
Turati, Chiara .
DEVELOPMENTAL SCIENCE, 2009, 12 (02) :236-248