| Literature DB >> 31417445 |
Ronghua Zhang1,2, Aibao Zhou1,2.
Abstract
The self-face is the unique representation of oneself, and it has a processing advantage over familiar faces and the faces of strangers. Generally, recognition of the self-face is significantly faster or more accurate in a variety of tasks compared with recognizing others' faces. While previous studies that used the present self-face as stimuli have found a processing advantage, what happens when the self-face turns old? To investigate whether an old self-face can still produce the processing advantage, we conducted two experiments. Experiment 1 used a standard visual search paradigm, and Experiment 2 used the implicit association test. In both experiments, the old self-face was compared with the present self-face or an old friend-face. We found that when the self-face turns old, the processing advantage disappears. This research demonstrates a new way to investigate the future self.Entities:
Keywords: IPA (implicit positive association); aging; old-face recognition; self-face; self-reference effect
Year: 2019 PMID: 31417445 PMCID: PMC6682690 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01644
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Figure 1The procedure of Experiment 1.
Figure 2The mean reaction times of the present face and old face for the self, friends, and strangers in the two, four, and six faces set sizes. During the present condition, self-face was responded to significantly faster than the friend-face; while in the old condition, the reaction time for the self-face was not significantly different with the friend-face.
The order of the procedure in the implicit association test.
| Block and number of trials | Category 1 | Category 2 | Attribute |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1: Practice, 20 trials | Me | Not me | |
| 2: Practice, 20 trials | Positive | Negative | |
| 3: Practice, 20 trials | Me + positive | Not me + negative | |
| 5: Practice, 20 trials | Negative | Positive | |
| 6: Practice, 20 trials | Me + negative | Not me + Positive | |
Note: In Procedure 1, “me” represented the present self-face picture, and “not me” represented the present friend picture. In Procedure 2, “me” represented the old self-face picture, and “not me” represented the old self-face picture. The positive and negative categories each consisted of 10 adjectives. Based on a previous study, an individual always associates himself/herself with a positive attribute; thus, we used “me + positive” and “not me + negative” as the congruent condition, and “me + negative” and “not me + positive” as the incongruent condition.
The mean (SD) of Experiment 2.
| SD | SD | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Self | Young | Positive association | 808.52 | 241.710 | 11.728 | 99.17 | 2.803 | 1.103 |
| Negative association | 962.81 | 308.945 | 98.33 | 3.695 | ||||
| Old | Positive association | 906.21 | 315.811 | 1.491 | 98.89 | 3.187 | 0.264 | |
| Negative association | 980.08 | 323.766 | 98.70 | 3.490 | ||||
| Friend | Young | Positive association | 959.25 | 298.812 | 2.600 | 97.78 | 4.216 | 0.190 |
| Negative association | 893.16 | 270.061 | 97.59 | 5.322 | ||||
| Old | Positive association | 1052.13 | 355.048 | 26.228 | 97.78 | 4.216 | −0.723 | |
| Negative association | 844.93 | 221.786 | 98.33 | 3.333 |
p < 0.01.
p < 0.001;
Figure 3The mean reaction times of the self-face and friend-face associated with positive and negative words in the present and old face conditions. SP refers to self-positive; SN refers to self-negative; OP refers to other-positive; ON refers to other-negative; OLD refers to stimuli in old condition. The two kinds of faces showed different patterns. **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001.