Exposure to varying images of the same person can encourage the formation of a representation that is sufficiently robust to allow recognition of previously unseen images of this person. While behavioural work suggests that face identity learning is harder for other-race faces, the present experiment investigated the neural correlates underlying own- and other-race face learning. Participants sorted own- and other-race identities into separate identity clusters and were further familiarised with these identities in a matching task. Subsequently, we compared event-related brain potentials (ERPs) in an implicit recognition (butterfly detection) task for learnt and previously unseen identities. We observed better sorting and matching for own-t...
Other-race faces are discriminated and recognized less accurately than own-race faces. The other-rac...
Abstract describing the poster (50 words): The aim of this study was to investigate the neural corr...
Abstract describing the poster (50 words): The aim of this study was to investigate the neural corre...
Participants are more accurate at remembering faces of their own relative to another ethnic group (o...
Exposure to multiple varying face images of the same person encourages the formation of identity rep...
People are better at remembering own-race relative to other-race faces. Here, we review event-relate...
We are typically more accurate at remembering own- than other-race faces. This “own-race bias” has b...
It is well established that memory is more accurate for own-relative to other-race faces (own-race b...
Natural variability between instances of unfamiliar faces can make it difficult to reconcile two ima...
Faces learnt in a single experimental session elicit a familiarity effect in event-related brain pot...
In everyday life we usually recognise personally familiar faces efficiently and without apparent eff...
Studies have shown that people are better at recognizing human faces from their own-race than from o...
Purpose: The other-race effect shows that people are better recognizing faces from their own-race co...
The other-race classification advantage is the phenomenon that people classify faces of other-races ...
Natural variability between instances of unfamiliar faces can make it difficult to reconcile two ima...
Other-race faces are discriminated and recognized less accurately than own-race faces. The other-rac...
Abstract describing the poster (50 words): The aim of this study was to investigate the neural corr...
Abstract describing the poster (50 words): The aim of this study was to investigate the neural corre...
Participants are more accurate at remembering faces of their own relative to another ethnic group (o...
Exposure to multiple varying face images of the same person encourages the formation of identity rep...
People are better at remembering own-race relative to other-race faces. Here, we review event-relate...
We are typically more accurate at remembering own- than other-race faces. This “own-race bias” has b...
It is well established that memory is more accurate for own-relative to other-race faces (own-race b...
Natural variability between instances of unfamiliar faces can make it difficult to reconcile two ima...
Faces learnt in a single experimental session elicit a familiarity effect in event-related brain pot...
In everyday life we usually recognise personally familiar faces efficiently and without apparent eff...
Studies have shown that people are better at recognizing human faces from their own-race than from o...
Purpose: The other-race effect shows that people are better recognizing faces from their own-race co...
The other-race classification advantage is the phenomenon that people classify faces of other-races ...
Natural variability between instances of unfamiliar faces can make it difficult to reconcile two ima...
Other-race faces are discriminated and recognized less accurately than own-race faces. The other-rac...
Abstract describing the poster (50 words): The aim of this study was to investigate the neural corr...
Abstract describing the poster (50 words): The aim of this study was to investigate the neural corre...