| Literature DB >> 30009251 |
Jennifer M McCaffery1,2, David J Robertson1,2,3, Andrew W Young2, A Mike Burton1,2.
Abstract
We investigated the relationships between individual differences in different aspects of face-identity processing, using the Glasgow Face Matching Test (GFMT) as a measure of unfamiliar face perception, the Cambridge Face Memory Test (CFMT) as a measure of new face learning, and the Before They Were Famous task (BTWF) as a measure of familiar face recognition. These measures were integrated into two separate studies examining the relationship between face processing and other tasks. For Study 1 we gathered participants' subjective ratings of their own face perception abilities. In Study 2 we used additional measures of perceptual and cognitive abilities, and personality factors to place individual differences in a broader context. Performance was significantly correlated across the three face-identity tasks in both studies, suggesting some degree of commonality of underlying mechanisms. For Study 1 the participants' self-ratings correlated poorly with performance, reaching significance only for judgements of familiar face recognition. In Study 2 there were few associations between face tasks and other measures, with task-level influences seeming to account for the small number of associations present. In general, face tasks correlated with each other, but did not show an overall relation with other perceptual, cognitive or personality tests. Our findings are consistent with the existence of a general face-perception factor, able to account for around 25% of the variance in scores. However, other relatively task-specific influences are also clearly operating.Entities:
Keywords: Face perception; Face recognition; Familiar faces; Individual differences; Unfamiliar faces
Year: 2018 PMID: 30009251 PMCID: PMC6019420 DOI: 10.1186/s41235-018-0112-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cogn Res Princ Implic ISSN: 2365-7464
Fig. 1Scatterplots showing the correlations between performance on the Glasgow Face Matching Test (GFMT) and the Cambridge Face Memory Test (CFMT) (upper left), the GFMT and the Before They Were Famous (BTWF) task (upper right), and the CFMT and BTWF (lower) in Study 1
Correlations between Questionnaire items (see ‘Methods’ for exact wording of each question) and face identity measures (Glasgow Face Matching Test, GFMT; Cambridge Face Memory Test, CFMT; Before They Were Famous task, BTWF) from Study 1. Uncorrected significant correlations are shown in bold: ap < .05, bp < .01; cSignificant correlations following Benjamini-Hochberg correction; 95% CI shown in brackets
| GFMT | CFMT | BTWF | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Question 1: Participant’s overall estimate of their ability | .30 | .25 | .14 |
| Question 2: Participant’s estimate of their ability to match unfamiliar faces (cf. GFMT) | .01 | −.13 | −.17 |
| Question 3: Participant’s estimate of their ability to recognise familiar faces (cf. BTWF) | .16 |
|
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| Question 4: Participant’s estimate of their ability to remember a photo of an unfamiliar face (cf. CFMT) | .10 | .18 | .14 |
| Question 5: Participant’s estimate of their ability to remember an unfamiliar face and recognise it from a different photo (cf. CFMT) | −.10 | .24 | .25 |
| Question 6: Participant’s insight into whether seeing multiple different views of a face will promote the learning of face identity | −.16 | .16 | .20 |
Fig. 2Examples of a Mooney face
Summary statistics for data from all measures used in Study 2. Face-processing tasks included measures of face-identity recognition (Glasgow Face Matching Test GFMT, Cambridge Face Memory Test CFMT, Before They Were Famous task BTWF) and face perception (Face-detection, Mooney faces)
| Measure | Mean | Standard deviation | Range | Minimum | Maximum |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Face processing: | |||||
| GFMT (%) | 80.75 | 10.87 | 52.50 | 47.50 | 100.00 |
| CFMT (%) | 69.85 | 15.06 | 66.67 | 31.94 | 98.61 |
| BTWF (%) | 15.58 | 12.40 | 55.26 | 0.00 | 55.26 |
| Face-detection (%) | 56.70 | 14.79 | 60.00 | 26.67 | 86.67 |
| Mooney faces (%) | 84.38 | 12.68 | 100.00 | 0.00 | 100.00 |
| Visual space perception: | |||||
| VOSP position discrimination (%) | 97.38 | 4.42 | 20.00 | 80.00 | 100.00 |
| BORB gap position (%) | 85.70 | 13.57 | 60.00 | 40.00 | 100.00 |
| Visual object perception: | |||||
| Letter detection (%) | 48.88 | 18.63 | 100 | 0.00 | 100.00 |
| Navon global (%) | 92.48 | 16.50 | 50.00 | 50.00 | 100.00 |
| Navon local (%) | 95.44 | 13.18 | 50.00 | 50.00 | 100.00 |
| Matching Familiar Figures (%) | 77.31 | 12.24 | 57.50 | 40.00 | 97.50 |
| VOSP Silhouettes (%) | 73.02 | 17.44 | 100.00 | 0.00 | 100.00 |
| Executive function: | |||||
| BADS Card Sorting (%) | 97.71 | 4.87 | 30.00 | 70.00 | 100.00 |
| Personality: | |||||
| Big 5 Extraversion | 24.82 | 6.31 | 29.00 | 9.00 | 38.00 |
| Big 5 Agreeableness | 32.85 | 5.76 | 27.00 | 18.00 | 45.00 |
| Big 5 Conscientiousness | 34.06 | 5.37 | 22.00 | 23.00 | 45.00 |
| Big 5 Neuroticism | 22.94 | 6.19 | 31.00 | 8.00 | 39.00 |
| Big 5 Openness | 35.09 | 6.11 | 33.00 | 17.00 | 50.00 |
| IRI Perspective Taking | 16.92 | 4.26 | 21.00 | 7.00 | 28.00 |
| IRI Fantasy Scale | 13.64 | 4.57 | 21.00 | 5.00 | 26.00 |
| IRI Empathic Concern | 18.51 | 4.41 | 20.00 | 8.00 | 28.00 |
| IRI Personal Distress | 11.32 | 4.20 | 22.00 | 0.00 | 22.00 |
Fig. 3Scatterplots showing the correlations between performance on the three core face tests in Study 2
Correlations between performance on the additional face-processing tasks (Face-detection and Mooney faces) and face-identity tasks (Glasgow Face Matching Test (GFMT), Cambridge Face Memory Test (CFMT), Before They Were Famous task (BTWF)) used in Study 2. Uncorrected significant correlations are shown in bold: ap < .05, bp < .01; cSignificant correlations following Benjamini-Hochberg correction; 95% CI shown in brackets
| Face-detection | Mooney faces | |
|---|---|---|
| GFMT | .10 | .10 |
| CFMT | .13 |
|
| BTWF | .17 | |
| Face-detection |
|
Correlations between performance on the face-processing tasks (Face-detection and Mooney faces) and face-identity tasks (Glasgow Face Matching Test GFMT, Cambridge Face Memory Test (CFMT), Before They Were Famous task (BTWF)) and other perceptual, cognitive and personality measures in Study 2. Uncorrected significant correlations are shown in bold: ap < .05, bp < .01, cp < .001; dSignificant correlations following Benjamini-Hochberg correction; 95% CI shown in brackets
| Measure | GFMT | CFMT | BTWF | Face-detection | Mooney faces |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Visual space perception: | |||||
| VOSP position Discrimination | .10 | .14 | .06 | −.03 | .09 |
| BORB gap position | .13 | −.05 | .06 | .01 |
|
| Visual object perception: | |||||
| Letter detection | .14 | .07 | .08 |
| .06 |
| Navon global | −.01 | −.10 | .09 | .16 | −.00 |
| Navon local |
| .03 | .03 | .16 | −.01 |
| Matching Familiar Figures |
| .02 | −.00 | .06 | .08 |
| VOSP Silhouettes | .14 |
|
| .12 |
|
| Executive function: | |||||
| BADS Card Sorting |
| .12 | .14 | −.13 | .06 |
| Personality: | |||||
| Big 5 Extraversion | .03 | .00 | .04 | −.05 | .07 |
| Big 5 Agreeableness | −.05 | −.07 | .02 | −.14 | −.01 |
| Big 5 Conscientiousness | .17 | .08 | −.03 | −.07 | −.05 |
| Big 5 Neuroticism | .02 | −.05 | −.04 | .02 | −.01 |
| Big 5 Openness | . | .11 | .01 | .12 | .13 |
| IRI Perspective Taking | .17 | .08 | .13 | .03 | .03 |
| IRI Fantasy Scale | .16 | .07 | .15 | .05 | −.05 |
| IRI Empathic Concern |
| .06 | .06 | −.06 | .10 |
| IRI Personal Distress | −.10 | .01 | −.06 | .03 | −.02 |