| Literature DB >> 20942358 |
Catherine J Mondloch1, Natalie Elms, Daphne Maurer, Gillian Rhodes, William G Hayward, James W Tanaka, Guomei Zhou.
Abstract
Adults are often better at recognising own-race than other-race faces. Unlike previous studies that reported an own-race advantage after administering a single test of either holistic processing or of featural and relational processing, we used a cross-over design and multiple tasks to assess differential processing of faces from a familiar race versus a less familiar race. Caucasian and Chinese adults performed four tasks, each with Caucasian and Chinese faces. Two tasks measured holistic processing: the composite face task and the part/whole task. Both tasks indicated holistic processing of own-race and other-race faces that did not differ in degree. Two tasks measured featural and relational processing: the Jane/Ling task, in which same/ different judgments were made about face pairs that differed in features of their spacing, and the scrambled/blurred task, in which test faces were scrambled (isolates memory for components) or blurred (isolates memory for relations). Both tasks provided evidence of an own-race advantage in both featural and relational processing. We conclude that even when adults process other-race faces holistically, other manifestations of an own-race advantage remain.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20942358 DOI: 10.1068/p6608
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Perception ISSN: 0301-0066 Impact factor: 1.490