The own-gender bias in face recognition has been hypothesised to be the result of extensive experience with own-gender faces, coupled with a motivation to process own-group faces more deeply than other-group faces. We test the effect of experience and motivation in four experiments employing standard old/new recognition paradigms. In Experiment 1, no own-gender recognition bias was observed following an attractiveness-rating encoding task regardless of school type (single- or mixed-sex). Experiment 2, which used a distinctiveness-rating encoding task, did find a significant own-gender bias for all groups of participants. Experiment 3 on adults found that the own-gender bias was not affected by self-reported contact with the other-gender, bu...
Adults' ability to recognize individual faces is shaped by experience. Young adults recognize own-ag...
Adults recognize own-race faces more accurately than other-race faces. We investigated three charact...
Previous research has demonstrated several own-group biases (OGBs) in face recognition, but why they...
The own-gender bias in face recognition has been hypothesized to be the result of extensive experien...
Whether the own-group (own-ethnicity, own-gender, and own-age) biases in face recognition are based ...
Research on the own-gender bias in face recognition has indicated an asymmetrical effect: an effect ...
The variability in the own-gender bias (OGB) in face-recognition is thought to be based on experienc...
It is well established that memory is more accurate for own-relative to other-race faces (own-race b...
Previous research has found that participants are better at recognising faces of their own race comp...
ike most own-group biases in face recognition, the own-age bias (OAB) is thought to be based either ...
Faces constitute one of the most important stimuli for humans. Studies show that women recognize mor...
Previous research has demonstrated a number of own-group biases in face recognition. For example, p...
The own-race bias (ORB) is the tendency for perceivers to better recognize own-race than cross-race ...
Facial recognition biases favouring one’s own group and impacting social interactions have been seen...
Previous research has shown that we recognise faces similar in age to ourselves better than older or...
Adults' ability to recognize individual faces is shaped by experience. Young adults recognize own-ag...
Adults recognize own-race faces more accurately than other-race faces. We investigated three charact...
Previous research has demonstrated several own-group biases (OGBs) in face recognition, but why they...
The own-gender bias in face recognition has been hypothesized to be the result of extensive experien...
Whether the own-group (own-ethnicity, own-gender, and own-age) biases in face recognition are based ...
Research on the own-gender bias in face recognition has indicated an asymmetrical effect: an effect ...
The variability in the own-gender bias (OGB) in face-recognition is thought to be based on experienc...
It is well established that memory is more accurate for own-relative to other-race faces (own-race b...
Previous research has found that participants are better at recognising faces of their own race comp...
ike most own-group biases in face recognition, the own-age bias (OAB) is thought to be based either ...
Faces constitute one of the most important stimuli for humans. Studies show that women recognize mor...
Previous research has demonstrated a number of own-group biases in face recognition. For example, p...
The own-race bias (ORB) is the tendency for perceivers to better recognize own-race than cross-race ...
Facial recognition biases favouring one’s own group and impacting social interactions have been seen...
Previous research has shown that we recognise faces similar in age to ourselves better than older or...
Adults' ability to recognize individual faces is shaped by experience. Young adults recognize own-ag...
Adults recognize own-race faces more accurately than other-race faces. We investigated three charact...
Previous research has demonstrated several own-group biases (OGBs) in face recognition, but why they...