Authors
Caroline Michel, Bruno Rossion, Jaehyun Han, Chan-Sup Chung, Roberto Caldara
Publication date
2006/7
Journal
Psychological science
Volume
17
Issue
7
Pages
608-615
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Description
Recognizing individual faces outside one's race poses difficulty, a phenomenon known as the other-race effect. Most researchers agree that this effect results from differential experience with same-race (SR) and other-race (OR) faces. However, the specific processes that develop with visual experience and underlie the other-race effect remain to be clarified. We tested whether the integration of facial features into a whole representation—holistic processing—was larger for SR than OR faces in Caucasians and Asians without life experience with OR faces. For both classes of participants, recognition of the upper half of a composite-face stimulus was more disrupted by the bottom half (the composite-face effect) for SR than OR faces, demonstrating that SR faces are processed more holistically than OR faces. This differential holistic processing for faces of different races, probably a byproduct of visual experience, may …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
C Michel, B Rossion, J Han, CS Chung, R Caldara - Psychological science, 2006