W2L1 - Face perception, disorders of face recognition, and super-recognisers Flashcards

1
Q

Are faces special? What are some basic effects discussed on slide 2: Image Effects, Processing Depth, and Sociality

A
  1. ) Paradoxical image effects (Tiny image diff spot; Big image diff no effect)
  2. ) Complex processing (recognition involves between & within category judgement; semantic level ‘name’)
  3. ) Essential to many aspects of social behaviour (evolutionary, newborn track normal more than scrambled)
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2
Q

What are some models of face-processing (3 questions we can ask when we process faces)

A
  1. ) Figural: Face / non-face
  2. ) Semantic: General (Gender) or specific (Familiar)
  3. ) Learnt/Innate
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3
Q

Obvious reasons to think faces are special

A
  1. ) Recognition drops with face-inversion
  2. ) Recognition drops with reversed contrast
  3. ) Identity stability: Caricatured faces > Veridical photographs)
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4
Q

Behavioural evidence for a specialised face pathway

A
  1. ) Face inversion effect
  2. ) Holistic processing
    - The composite effect
    - The whole-part effect
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5
Q

Behavioural evidence for face-inversion effect. Upright vs invered

A

Configural processing for upright faces

Featural processing for inverted faces

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6
Q

Behavioural evidence for holistic processing. Composite. What does it suggest

A

Composite: Slow to identify half of a chimeric face aligned with an inconsistent other half-face.
> Mandatory processing of the whole face

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7
Q

Behavioural evidence for holistic processing. Part-whole. What does it suggest

A

Better at distinguishing two face parts in the context of a whole face than in isolation:

Does not occur for controls (inverted/scrambled/house)

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8
Q

Role of expertise in face-inversion

A

Diamond &Carey (1986):

Some inversion for landscapes (Smaller for house)
Comparative inversion for dog experts

Rossion & Curran (2010): Recognition inversion effects depend on level of expertise

Greater inversion effect for self-declared car-experts

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9
Q

Gauthier & Tarr (1997). IV and DV

A

IV: Expertise
DV: Sensitivity/d’ and RT

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10
Q

Gauthier & Tarr (1997). How long were their study

A

3240 trials.

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11
Q

Gauthier & Tarr (1997). Results. What does it suggest.

A
  1. ) Experts: Accurate and Fast
  2. ) More sensitive to configural changes (Transformed condition slower RT than studied condition)

> Qualitative change in the recognition behavior of experts

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12
Q

What did Farah (1990) argue in terms of cases of visual agnosia

A

Argued for two independent recognition systems:

Structural mechanisms: Associated with “normal” object recognition
Holistic mechanisms: Associated with face recognition

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13
Q

Who is CK

A

Acute object agnosia; no deficit in face recognition

CK sees the face, not the constituent fish…

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14
Q

How do we measure facial recognition

A
  1. ) Before They Were Famous
  2. ) Cambridge Face Memory Test
  3. ) Cambridge Face Perception Test
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15
Q

BTWF Test on Facial Recognition. Flaw?

A

59 pictures of celebrities (as children)
- Correct identification requires generalization across substantial change in the appearance of the face

Flaw:
Does depend somewhat on prior exposure…

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16
Q

CFMT on Facial Recognition. Flaw?

A

6 male faces: 3 trained/ 3 alt forced choice at 4 difficult levels

Flaw:
Might be reliant on memory

17
Q

CFPT on Facial Recognition.

A

Test images at ¾ view
- 6 frontal non-target faces morphed with target (different %)

Rank from most to least similar

18
Q

Greeble learning in a prosopagnosic

A

Edward.

Normal Greeble recognition performance
Suggests face deficits do not involve brain processes used to acquire Greeble expertise

19
Q

What are some properties of developmental prosopagnosia. What are 2 notions on face recognition ability.

A
  • Absence of brain damage or other cognitive deficits.
  • 2%–2.5% population
  1. ) Healthy/Pathological
  2. ) Broad (normal) distribution of face recognition ability, with developmental prosopagnosia on lower tail and superrecognisor on upper tail
20
Q

Diff between developmental prosopagnosics and superecognisers in relation to film

A

Superrecognisor: Can recognise minors
Prosopagnosia: Little interest because they cannot follow characters

21
Q

How do superrecognisors display the face-inversion effect. What does it suggest?

A

Larger face inversion effect

> Supports normative idea that inversion effect is not related to QUALITATIVE different processing compared to normals.

22
Q

Behaviourally, what are some circumstances/features facial recognition dependent on:

A

Recognition:

  • Occurs in extreme deformation
  • Depend on external features (e.g. prosopagnosics)