High familiar faces have both eye recognition and holistic processing advantages

被引:0
|
作者
Zhe Wang
Ting Wu
Weidong Zhang
Wenjing Deng
Yijun Li
Lushuang Zhang
Yu-Hao P. Sun
Haiyang Jin
机构
[1] Zhejiang Sci-Tech University,Department of Psychology
[2] New York University Abu Dhabi,Division of Science, Department of Psychology
来源
Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics | 2023年 / 85卷
关键词
Familiarity; Face recognition; Holistic processing; Part-based processing; Eye processing;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
People recognize familiar faces better than unfamiliar faces. However, it remains unknown whether familiarity affects part-based and/or holistic processing. Wang et al., Frontiers in Psychology, 6, 559 (2015), Vision Research, 157, 89–96 (2019) found both enhanced part-based and holistic processing in eye relative to mouth regions (i.e., in a region-selective manner) for own-race and own-species faces, i.e., faces with more experience. Here, we examined the role of face familiarity in eyes (part-based, region-selective) and holistic processing. Face familiarity was tested at three levels: high-familiar (faces of students from the same department and the same class who attended almost all courses together), low-familiar (faces of students from the same department but different classes who attended some courses together), and unfamiliar (faces of schoolmates from different departments who seldom attended the same courses). Using the old/new task in Experiment 1, we found that participants recognized eyes of high-familiar faces better than low-familiar and unfamiliar ones, while similar performance was observed for mouths, indicating a region-selective, eyes familiarity effect. Using the “Perceptual field” paradigm in Experiment 2, we observed a stronger inversion effect for high-familiar faces, a weaker inversion effect for low-familiar faces, but a non-significant inversion effect for unfamiliar faces, indicating that face familiarity plays a role in holistic processing. Taken together, our results suggest that familiarity, like other experience-based variables (e.g., race and species), can improve both eye processing and holistic processing.
引用
收藏
页码:2296 / 2306
页数:10
相关论文
共 8 条
  • [1] High familiar faces have both eye recognition and holistic processing advantages
    Wang, Zhe
    Wu, Ting
    Zhang, Weidong
    Deng, Wenjing
    Li, Yijun
    Zhang, Lushuang
    Sun, Yu-Hao P.
    Jin, Haiyang
    ATTENTION PERCEPTION & PSYCHOPHYSICS, 2023, 85 (07) : 2296 - 2306
  • [2] Early identity recognition of familiar faces is not dependent on holistic processing
    Mohr, Sarah
    Wang, Anxu
    Engell, Andrew D.
    SOCIAL COGNITIVE AND AFFECTIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 2018, 13 (10) : 1019 - 1027
  • [3] Hemisphere-dependent holistic processing of familiar faces
    Ramon, Meike
    Rossion, Bruno
    BRAIN AND COGNITION, 2012, 78 (01) : 7 - 13
  • [4] Tolerance for distorted faces: Challenges to a configural processing account of familiar face recognition
    Sandford, Adam
    Burton, A. Mike
    COGNITION, 2014, 132 (03) : 262 - 268
  • [5] Processing of novel and familiar faces in infants at average and high risk for autism
    Key, Alexandra P. F.
    Stone, Wendy L.
    DEVELOPMENTAL COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 2012, 2 (02) : 244 - 255
  • [6] All new kids on the block? Impaired holistic processing of personally familiar faces in a kindergarten teacher with acquired prosopagnosia
    Ramon, Meike
    Busigny, Thomas
    Gosselin, Frederic
    Rossion, Bruno
    VISUAL COGNITION, 2016, 24 (5-6) : 321 - 355
  • [7] Association of idiosyncratic eye-movement patterns with holistic processing of faces as measured by the composite face effect and the face inversion effect
    Zhong, Nianzeng
    Hsiao, Janet H.
    Zhou, Guomei
    Hayward, William G.
    VISUAL COGNITION, 2023, 31 (07) : 485 - 500
  • [8] A regional composite-face effect for species-specific recognition: Upper and lower halves play different roles in holistic processing of monkey faces
    Wang, Zhe
    Quinn, Paul C.
    Jin, Haiyang
    Sun, Yu-Hao P.
    Tanaka, James W.
    Pascalis, Olivier
    Lee, Kang
    VISION RESEARCH, 2019, 157 : 89 - 96