Literature DB >> 30285572

Own-Age Bias and Positivity Effects in Facial Recognition.

Benjamin Denkinger1, Madeline Kinn1.   

Abstract

Background/Study Context - In the current study, we evaluated two age-related differences in recognition memory: the own-age bias, wherein older and younger adults best recognize those of their own age group, and an age-related positivity effect, wherein older adults recall positive emotional information better than negative information relative to younger adults. We sought to extend previous research that jointly investigated these variables in recognition memory. Methods - Younger (age 18 - 27) and older (age 62 - 80) adults completed an incidental encoding task on a sequence of 50 positive, negative, or neutrally valenced images of older and younger adult faces. After a distractor task, participants made forced-choice recognition judgments and rated their decision confidence for images that were repeated with the same or a different emotional expression, and for novel, previously unseen faces. Results - Older and younger adults' recognition discriminability did not differ significantly between age groups. Notably, the data indicated an own-age bias in young adults, but not in older adults, and both age groups' recognition accuracy was greatest for faces that had originally been shown with a positive emotional expression. Conclusion - To our knowledge, this research is the first to demonstrate an own-age recognition bias in younger adults for emotional faces. Although our predictions of a differential impact by emotional faces on recognition of same and other-age faces were not supported, we identify a number of factors that contextualize these findings in the recent literature.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Own-age bias; face recognition; older adults; positivity effect; recognition memory

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30285572     DOI: 10.1080/0361073X.2018.1521493

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Exp Aging Res        ISSN: 0361-073X            Impact factor:   1.645


  4 in total

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Authors:  Nathan M Petro; Nim Tottenham; Maital Neta
Journal:  Dev Psychobiol       Date:  2021-01-05       Impact factor: 3.038

2.  When twice is better than once: increased liking of repeated items influences memory in younger and older adults.

Authors:  Rocco Palumbo; Alberto Di Domenico; Beth Fairfield; Nicola Mammarella
Journal:  BMC Psychol       Date:  2021-02-06

3.  Social contacts and loneliness affect the own age bias for emotional faces.

Authors:  Adriana Patrizia Gonzalez Pizzio; Alla Yankouskaya; Guido Alessandri; Sancho Loreto; Anna Pecchinenda
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-09-27       Impact factor: 4.996

4.  Ignore the faces: Neural characterisation of emotional inhibition from childhood to adulthood using MEG.

Authors:  Marlee M Vandewouw; Kristina Safar; Julie Sato; Benjamin A E Hunt; Charline M Urbain; Elizabeth W Pang; Evdokia Anagnostou; Margot J Taylor
Journal:  Hum Brain Mapp       Date:  2021-09-28       Impact factor: 5.038

  4 in total

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