Development of visual preference for own- versus other-race faces in infancy.
نویسندگان
چکیده
منابع مشابه
An encoding advantage for own-race versus other-race faces.
Studies have shown that individuals are better able to recognise the faces of people from their own race than the faces of people from other races. Although the so-called own-race effect has been generally regarded as an advantage in recognition memory, differences in the processing of the own-race versus other-race faces might also be found at the earlier stages of perceptual encoding. In this...
متن کاملThe development of memory for own- and other-race faces.
This study demonstrates that experience and development interact to influence the "cross-race effect." In a multination study (n=245), Caucasian children and adults of European ancestry living in the United States, Norway, or South Africa, as well as biracial (Caucasian-African American) children and adults living in the United States, were tested for recognition of Asian, African, and Caucasia...
متن کاملAttractiveness of own-race, other-race, and mixed-race faces.
Averaged face composites, which represent the central tendency of a familiar population of faces, are attractive. If this prototypicality contributes to their appeal, then averaged composites should be more attractive when their component faces come from a familiar, own-race population than when they come from a less familiar, other-race population. We compared the attractiveness of own-race co...
متن کاملEncoding differences affect the number and precision of own-race versus other-race faces stored in visual working memory
Other-race faces are discriminated and recognized less accurately than own-race faces. Despite a wealth of research characterizing this other-race effect (ORE), little is known about the nature of the representations of own-race versus other-race faces. This is because traditional measures of this ORE provide a binary measure of discrimination or recognition (correct/incorrect), failing to capt...
متن کاملAssessing the influence of recollection and familiarity in memory for own- versus other-race faces.
In the present research, we examined the contributions of recollection and familiarity in memory for own- and other-race faces. In Experiment 1, we used a repetition lag paradigm (Jennings & Jacoby, 1997) to demonstrate the typical cross-race effect with respect to discrimination accuracy and response bias. Participants were more likely to commit repetition errors by falsely recognizing repeate...
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: Developmental Psychology
سال: 2015
ISSN: 1939-0599,0012-1649
DOI: 10.1037/a0038835