Do individual differences in face recognition ability moderate the other ethnicity effect?

Individuals are better at recognizing faces from their own ethnic group compared with other ethnicity faces-the other-ethnicity effect (OEE). This finding is said to reflect differences in experience and familiarity to faces from other ethnicities relative to faces corresponding with the viewers...

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Main Authors: Childs, Michael Jeanne, Jones, Alex, Thwaites, Peter, Zdravković, Sunčica, Thorley, Craig, Suzuki, Atsunobu, Shen, Rachel, Ding, Qi, Burns, Edwin, Xu, Hong, Tree, Jeremy J.
Other Authors: School of Social Sciences
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2022
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/161546
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1615462022-09-07T06:34:26Z Do individual differences in face recognition ability moderate the other ethnicity effect? Childs, Michael Jeanne Jones, Alex Thwaites, Peter Zdravković, Sunčica Thorley, Craig Suzuki, Atsunobu Shen, Rachel Ding, Qi Burns, Edwin Xu, Hong Tree, Jeremy J. School of Social Sciences Social sciences::Psychology Face Memory Developmental Prosopagnosia Individuals are better at recognizing faces from their own ethnic group compared with other ethnicity faces-the other-ethnicity effect (OEE). This finding is said to reflect differences in experience and familiarity to faces from other ethnicities relative to faces corresponding with the viewers' ethnicity. However, own-ethnicity face recognition performance ranges considerably within a population, from very poor to extremely good. In addition, within-population recognition performance on other-ethnicity faces can also vary considerably with some individuals being classed as "other ethnicity face blind" (Wan et al., 2017). Despite evidence for considerable variation in performance within population for faces of both types, it is currently unclear whether the magnitude of the OEE changes as a function of this variability. By recruiting large-scale multinational samples, we investigated the size of the OEE across the full range of own and other ethnicity face performance while considering measures of social contact. We find that the magnitude of the OEE is remarkably consistent across all levels of within-population own- and other-ethnicity face recognition ability, and this pattern was unaffected by social contact measures. These findings suggest that the OEE is a persistent feature of face recognition performance, with consequences for models built around very poor, and very good face recognizers. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved). 2022-09-07T06:34:26Z 2022-09-07T06:34:26Z 2021 Journal Article Childs, M. J., Jones, A., Thwaites, P., Zdravković, S., Thorley, C., Suzuki, A., Shen, R., Ding, Q., Burns, E., Xu, H. & Tree, J. J. (2021). Do individual differences in face recognition ability moderate the other ethnicity effect?. Journal of Experimental Psychology. Human Perception and Performance, 47(7), 893-907. https://dx.doi.org/10.1037/xhp0000762 0096-1523 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/161546 10.1037/xhp0000762 34292047 2-s2.0-85114958531 7 47 893 907 en Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance © 2021 American Psychological Association. All rights reserved.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Psychology
Face Memory
Developmental Prosopagnosia
spellingShingle Social sciences::Psychology
Face Memory
Developmental Prosopagnosia
Childs, Michael Jeanne
Jones, Alex
Thwaites, Peter
Zdravković, Sunčica
Thorley, Craig
Suzuki, Atsunobu
Shen, Rachel
Ding, Qi
Burns, Edwin
Xu, Hong
Tree, Jeremy J.
Do individual differences in face recognition ability moderate the other ethnicity effect?
description Individuals are better at recognizing faces from their own ethnic group compared with other ethnicity faces-the other-ethnicity effect (OEE). This finding is said to reflect differences in experience and familiarity to faces from other ethnicities relative to faces corresponding with the viewers' ethnicity. However, own-ethnicity face recognition performance ranges considerably within a population, from very poor to extremely good. In addition, within-population recognition performance on other-ethnicity faces can also vary considerably with some individuals being classed as "other ethnicity face blind" (Wan et al., 2017). Despite evidence for considerable variation in performance within population for faces of both types, it is currently unclear whether the magnitude of the OEE changes as a function of this variability. By recruiting large-scale multinational samples, we investigated the size of the OEE across the full range of own and other ethnicity face performance while considering measures of social contact. We find that the magnitude of the OEE is remarkably consistent across all levels of within-population own- and other-ethnicity face recognition ability, and this pattern was unaffected by social contact measures. These findings suggest that the OEE is a persistent feature of face recognition performance, with consequences for models built around very poor, and very good face recognizers. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
author2 School of Social Sciences
author_facet School of Social Sciences
Childs, Michael Jeanne
Jones, Alex
Thwaites, Peter
Zdravković, Sunčica
Thorley, Craig
Suzuki, Atsunobu
Shen, Rachel
Ding, Qi
Burns, Edwin
Xu, Hong
Tree, Jeremy J.
format Article
author Childs, Michael Jeanne
Jones, Alex
Thwaites, Peter
Zdravković, Sunčica
Thorley, Craig
Suzuki, Atsunobu
Shen, Rachel
Ding, Qi
Burns, Edwin
Xu, Hong
Tree, Jeremy J.
author_sort Childs, Michael Jeanne
title Do individual differences in face recognition ability moderate the other ethnicity effect?
title_short Do individual differences in face recognition ability moderate the other ethnicity effect?
title_full Do individual differences in face recognition ability moderate the other ethnicity effect?
title_fullStr Do individual differences in face recognition ability moderate the other ethnicity effect?
title_full_unstemmed Do individual differences in face recognition ability moderate the other ethnicity effect?
title_sort do individual differences in face recognition ability moderate the other ethnicity effect?
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/161546
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