| Literature DB >> 34104381 |
Kirsten Smith1, Vera Kempe1, Lara Wood1.
Abstract
When drawing faces, people show a systematic bias of placing the eyes higher up the head than they are placed in reality. This study investigated the development of this phenomenon while removing the potential confound of drawing ability. Participants (N = 124) in three age groups (3-5 yo, 10-11 yo, and adults) reconstructed two foam faces: one from observation and one from memory. The high eye placement bias was remarkably robust with mean eye placement in every condition significantly higher than the original faces. The same bias was not shown for mouth placement. Eye placement was highest for the youngest participants and for the memory conditions. The results suggest that an eye placement bias is not caused by the motor skill demands required for drawing and lend evidence to the suggestion that an eye placement bias is caused by perceptual and decision-making processes.Entities:
Keywords: development; face perception; objects and features; perception
Year: 2021 PMID: 34104381 PMCID: PMC8161889 DOI: 10.1177/20416695211017564
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Iperception ISSN: 2041-6695
Figure 1.Female and male model face stimuli (left panel), blank faces (middle panel), and facial features (right panel).
Figure 2.Violin plot showing all data points (white circles) as well the group means (black circles). The dashed line indicates the O.5 EPR present in both models.