<div><p>Identity comparisons of photographs of unfamiliar faces are prone to error but important for applied settings, such as person identification at passport control. Finding techniques to improve face-matching accuracy is therefore an important contemporary research topic. This study investigated whether matching accuracy can be improved by instruction to attend to specific facial features. Experiment 1 showed that instruction to attend to the eyebrows enhanced matching accuracy for optimized same-day same-race face pairs but not for other-race faces. By contrast, accuracy was unaffected by instruction to attend to the eyes, and declined with instruction to attend to ears. Experiment 2 replicated the eyebrow-instruction improvement with...
Unfamiliar face matching is a surprisingly difficult task, yet we often rely on people’s matching de...
We compared face identification by humans and machines using images taken under a variety of uncontr...
A wealth of studies have shown that humans are remarkably poor at determining whether two face image...
Identity comparisons of photographs of unfamiliar faces are prone to error but important for applied...
Identity comparisons of photographs of unfamiliar faces are prone to error but important for applied...
Identity comparisons of photographs of unfamiliar faces are prone to error but imperative for securi...
Face matching entails a comparison between two faces that are unfamiliar to an observer, who must th...
Simultaneous face matching to verify identity is key to security and policing. However, matching is ...
Verifying the identity of an unfamiliar person by examining their face is a surprisingly error-prone...
Everyday security tasks, such as passport control, require comparison of peoples’ faces with portrai...
Accurate matching of unfamiliar faces is vital in security and forensic applications, yet previous r...
It is well-established that matching images of unfamiliar faces is rather error prone. However, ther...
Many security settings rely on the identity matching of unfamiliar people, which has led this task t...
Forensic face matching refers to the comparison of pairs of faces for identification purposes, and i...
Unfamiliar face matching is a surprisingly difficult task, yet we often rely on people's matching de...
Unfamiliar face matching is a surprisingly difficult task, yet we often rely on people’s matching de...
We compared face identification by humans and machines using images taken under a variety of uncontr...
A wealth of studies have shown that humans are remarkably poor at determining whether two face image...
Identity comparisons of photographs of unfamiliar faces are prone to error but important for applied...
Identity comparisons of photographs of unfamiliar faces are prone to error but important for applied...
Identity comparisons of photographs of unfamiliar faces are prone to error but imperative for securi...
Face matching entails a comparison between two faces that are unfamiliar to an observer, who must th...
Simultaneous face matching to verify identity is key to security and policing. However, matching is ...
Verifying the identity of an unfamiliar person by examining their face is a surprisingly error-prone...
Everyday security tasks, such as passport control, require comparison of peoples’ faces with portrai...
Accurate matching of unfamiliar faces is vital in security and forensic applications, yet previous r...
It is well-established that matching images of unfamiliar faces is rather error prone. However, ther...
Many security settings rely on the identity matching of unfamiliar people, which has led this task t...
Forensic face matching refers to the comparison of pairs of faces for identification purposes, and i...
Unfamiliar face matching is a surprisingly difficult task, yet we often rely on people's matching de...
Unfamiliar face matching is a surprisingly difficult task, yet we often rely on people’s matching de...
We compared face identification by humans and machines using images taken under a variety of uncontr...
A wealth of studies have shown that humans are remarkably poor at determining whether two face image...