Matching two different images of a face is a very easy task for familiar viewers, but much harder for unfamiliar viewers. Despite this, use of photo-ID is widespread, and people appear not to know how unreliable it is. We present a series of experiments investigating bias both when performing a matching task and when predicting other people’s performance. Participants saw pairs of faces and were asked to make a same/different judgement, after which they were asked to predict how well other people, unfamiliar with these faces, would perform. In four experiments we show different groups of participants familiar and unfamiliar faces, manipulating this in different ways: celebrities in experiments 1–3 and personally familiar faces in ex...
Simultaneous face matching to verify identity is key to security and policing. However, matching is ...
Many security settings rely on the identity matching of unfamiliar people, which has led this task t...
It has been known for many years that identifying familiar faces is much easier than identifying unf...
Matching two different images of a face is a very easy task for familiar viewers, but much harder fo...
Matching two different images of a face is a very easy task for familiar viewers, but much harder fo...
Matching two different images of a face is a very easy task for familiar viewers, but much harder f...
Summary: It is well-established that matching images of unfamiliar faces is rather error prone. Howe...
Familiar faces are remembered better than unfamiliar faces. Furthermore, it is much easier to match ...
A wealth of studies have shown that humans are remarkably poor at determining whether two face image...
In forensic person recognition tasks, mistakes in the identification of unfamiliar faces occur frequ...
Summary: Psychological research shows that humans can not reliably match unfamiliar faces. This pres...
Matching unfamiliar faces is a well-studied task, apparently capturing important everyday decisions ...
Viewers find it difficult to match photos of unfamiliar faces for identity. Despite this, the use of...
This thesis explores the mechanisms which underlie the improvement to face-identification which aris...
Research has systematically examined how laboratory participants and real-world practitioners decide...
Simultaneous face matching to verify identity is key to security and policing. However, matching is ...
Many security settings rely on the identity matching of unfamiliar people, which has led this task t...
It has been known for many years that identifying familiar faces is much easier than identifying unf...
Matching two different images of a face is a very easy task for familiar viewers, but much harder fo...
Matching two different images of a face is a very easy task for familiar viewers, but much harder fo...
Matching two different images of a face is a very easy task for familiar viewers, but much harder f...
Summary: It is well-established that matching images of unfamiliar faces is rather error prone. Howe...
Familiar faces are remembered better than unfamiliar faces. Furthermore, it is much easier to match ...
A wealth of studies have shown that humans are remarkably poor at determining whether two face image...
In forensic person recognition tasks, mistakes in the identification of unfamiliar faces occur frequ...
Summary: Psychological research shows that humans can not reliably match unfamiliar faces. This pres...
Matching unfamiliar faces is a well-studied task, apparently capturing important everyday decisions ...
Viewers find it difficult to match photos of unfamiliar faces for identity. Despite this, the use of...
This thesis explores the mechanisms which underlie the improvement to face-identification which aris...
Research has systematically examined how laboratory participants and real-world practitioners decide...
Simultaneous face matching to verify identity is key to security and policing. However, matching is ...
Many security settings rely on the identity matching of unfamiliar people, which has led this task t...
It has been known for many years that identifying familiar faces is much easier than identifying unf...