<div><p>People have a memory advantage for faces that belong to the same group, for example, that attend the same university or have the same personality type. Faces from such in-group members are assumed to receive more attention during memory encoding and are therefore recognized more accurately. Here we use event-related potentials related to memory encoding and retrieval to investigate the neural correlates of the in-group memory advantage. Using the minimal group procedure, subjects were classified based on a bogus personality test as belonging to one of two personality types. While the electroencephalogram was recorded, subjects studied and recognized faces supposedly belonging to the subject’s own and the other personality type. Subj...
Recognition of own-race faces tend to be better than that of other-race faces. Although this other-r...
According to much research, the Own Group Bias (OGB) in face memory occurs as a consequence of socia...
The own-group bias (OGB) in face recognition refers to the finding that in-group faces are recognize...
People have a memory advantage for faces that belong to the same group, for example, that attend the...
The ability to recognize faces of family members, friends, and acquaintances plays an important role...
People are better at remembering faces from their own race than other races-a phenomenon with signif...
The present study examines participants’ memory for face images in arbitrary experimental groups acc...
International audienceMere affiliation with a social group alters people's perception of other indiv...
The current research examined the influence of ingroup/outgroup categorization on brain event-relate...
Every day we encounter new people, interact with them, and form person impressions based on quick an...
Social identity, the part of the self-concept derived from group membership, is a key explanatory co...
During social interactions, we make inferences about people's personal characteristics based on thei...
ABSTRACT A Mnemonic Discrimination Account for the Behavioral and Neural Correlates Underlying the O...
People often recognize and remember faces of individuals within their own race more easily than thos...
According to much research, the Own Group Bias (OGB) in face memory occurs as a consequence of socia...
Recognition of own-race faces tend to be better than that of other-race faces. Although this other-r...
According to much research, the Own Group Bias (OGB) in face memory occurs as a consequence of socia...
The own-group bias (OGB) in face recognition refers to the finding that in-group faces are recognize...
People have a memory advantage for faces that belong to the same group, for example, that attend the...
The ability to recognize faces of family members, friends, and acquaintances plays an important role...
People are better at remembering faces from their own race than other races-a phenomenon with signif...
The present study examines participants’ memory for face images in arbitrary experimental groups acc...
International audienceMere affiliation with a social group alters people's perception of other indiv...
The current research examined the influence of ingroup/outgroup categorization on brain event-relate...
Every day we encounter new people, interact with them, and form person impressions based on quick an...
Social identity, the part of the self-concept derived from group membership, is a key explanatory co...
During social interactions, we make inferences about people's personal characteristics based on thei...
ABSTRACT A Mnemonic Discrimination Account for the Behavioral and Neural Correlates Underlying the O...
People often recognize and remember faces of individuals within their own race more easily than thos...
According to much research, the Own Group Bias (OGB) in face memory occurs as a consequence of socia...
Recognition of own-race faces tend to be better than that of other-race faces. Although this other-r...
According to much research, the Own Group Bias (OGB) in face memory occurs as a consequence of socia...
The own-group bias (OGB) in face recognition refers to the finding that in-group faces are recognize...