L12 - Face Recognition Flashcards

1
Q

What is different between facial and object recognition?

A
  • Face recognition to identify individual, not categorise face as a face.
  • Faces are recognised holistically
  • Have more expertise with faces.
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2
Q

What is Prosopagnosia?

A

Deficits in face recognition, with intact object recognition.

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3
Q

What are the configurable properties of faces?

A
  • First-order relations between features: eyes above nose, nose above mouth
  • Holistic processing: all features perceived together.
  • Second order relations between features: exact metric differences between features. 1
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4
Q

What is evidence of the holistic processing of faces?

A
  • Part-whole effect
  • Face inversion effect
  • Prosopagnosia: better at discriminating features in isolation.
  • Composite effect
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5
Q

What is the Part-Whole Effect?

A

It’s easier to recognise a face feature when it’s presented within a face.
E.g. when learning Larry’s face, it’s easier to determine which one is Larry, not just his nose individually. If trained on a scrambled face, it’s easier to make judgements on isolated feature.

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6
Q

What is the Face Inversion Effect?

A
  • Upside-down faces are harder to recognise (slower and less accurate)
  • Parts are hard to discriminate in inverted faces.
  • Whole faces are easier to identify when upright.
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7
Q

What is the Composite Effect?

A

It’s difficult to judge whether the top half and bottom half of a face are from separate people, because we perceive it as one face.

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8
Q

What is the Other Race Effect?

A
  • Some evidence that faces of other races are processed less holistically.
  • Reduced inversion effect, composite effect findings mixed.
  • Some evidence that holistic and part-based information more effectively processed in own race.
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9
Q

Why makes familiar face recognition different?

A

Burton argued that configural information can’t explain ability to recognise familiar faces because different lighting, postures etc., you can still recognise.

  1. Large configural changes leave recognition unharmed.
  2. Non-configural changes harm recognition. E.g. can’t recognise people in photo negatives.
  3. Face Shape vs. Face Texture. Put familiar face onto another structure, and can still identify. Texture dominates.
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10
Q

How do we recognise familiar faces (Jenkins & Burton, 2011)?

A

Abstract statistical averages of all the instances of the familiar face, and is stable from contamination.

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