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Ensemble coding of facial identity is not refined by experience: Evidence from other‐race and inverted faces
The ability to recognize identity despite within‐person variability in appearance is likely a face‐specific skill and shaped by experience. Ensemble coding – the automatic extraction of the average of a stimulus array – has been proposed as a mechanism underlying face learning (allowing one to recog...
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Published in: | The British journal of psychology 2021-02, Vol.112 (1), p.265-281 |
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Main Authors: | , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | The ability to recognize identity despite within‐person variability in appearance is likely a face‐specific skill and shaped by experience. Ensemble coding – the automatic extraction of the average of a stimulus array – has been proposed as a mechanism underlying face learning (allowing one to recognize novel instances of a newly learned face). We investigated whether ensemble encoding, like face learning and recognition, is refined by experience by testing participants with upright own‐race faces and two categories of faces with which they lacked experience: other‐race faces (Experiment 1) and inverted faces (Experiment 2). Participants viewed four images of an unfamiliar identity and then were asked whether a test image of that same identity had been in the study array. Each test image was a matching exemplar (from the array), matching average (the average of the images in the array), non‐matching exemplar (a novel image of the same identity), or non‐matching average (an average of four different images of the same identity). Adults showed comparable ensemble coding for all three categories (i.e., reported that matching averages had been present more than non‐matching averages), providing evidence that this early stage of face learning is not shaped by face‐specific experience. |
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ISSN: | 0007-1269 2044-8295 |
DOI: | 10.1111/bjop.12457 |