In face matching, observers have to decide whether two photographs depict the same person or different people. This task is not only remarkably difficult but accuracy declines further during prolonged testing. The current study investigated whether this decline in long tasks can be eliminated with regular rest-breaks (Experiment 1) or room-switching (Experiment 2). Both experiments replicated the accuracy decline for long face-matching tasks and showed that this could not be eliminated with rest or room-switching. These findings suggest that person identification in applied settings, such as passport control, might be particularly error-prone due to the long and repetitive nature of the task. The experiments also show that it is difficult t...
Face matching entails a comparison between two faces that are unfamiliar to an observer, who must th...
This paper presents the Kent Face Matching Test (KFMT), which comprises 200 same-identity and 20 dif...
Summary: Psychological research shows that humans can not reliably match unfamiliar faces. This pres...
Research has consistently demonstrated that the matching of unfamiliar faces is remarkably error-pro...
Summary: It is well-established that matching images of unfamiliar faces is rather error prone. Howe...
This study examined the effect of time pressure on face matching accuracy. Across two experiments, o...
Photographic identity documents (IDs) are commonly used despite clear evidence that unfamiliar face ...
Identity comparisons of photographs of unfamiliar faces are prone to error but important for applied...
Photographic identity documents (IDs) are commonly used despite clear evidence that unfamiliar face ...
This study investigated the impact of time pressure on matching accuracy with face pairs that combin...
Everyday security tasks, such as passport control, require comparison of peoples’ faces with portrai...
Automatic facial recognition is becoming increasingly ubiquitous in security contexts such as passpo...
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...
Simultaneous face matching to verify identity is key to security and policing. However, matching is ...
Face matching entails a comparison between two faces that are unfamiliar to an observer, who must th...
This paper presents the Kent Face Matching Test (KFMT), which comprises 200 same-identity and 20 dif...
Summary: Psychological research shows that humans can not reliably match unfamiliar faces. This pres...
Research has consistently demonstrated that the matching of unfamiliar faces is remarkably error-pro...
Summary: It is well-established that matching images of unfamiliar faces is rather error prone. Howe...
This study examined the effect of time pressure on face matching accuracy. Across two experiments, o...
Photographic identity documents (IDs) are commonly used despite clear evidence that unfamiliar face ...
Identity comparisons of photographs of unfamiliar faces are prone to error but important for applied...
Photographic identity documents (IDs) are commonly used despite clear evidence that unfamiliar face ...
This study investigated the impact of time pressure on matching accuracy with face pairs that combin...
Everyday security tasks, such as passport control, require comparison of peoples’ faces with portrai...
Automatic facial recognition is becoming increasingly ubiquitous in security contexts such as passpo...
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...
Simultaneous face matching to verify identity is key to security and policing. However, matching is ...
Face matching entails a comparison between two faces that are unfamiliar to an observer, who must th...
This paper presents the Kent Face Matching Test (KFMT), which comprises 200 same-identity and 20 dif...
Summary: Psychological research shows that humans can not reliably match unfamiliar faces. This pres...