Photo-identification is based on the premise that photographs are representative of facial appearance. However, previous studies show that ratings of likeness vary across different photographs of the same face, suggesting that some images capture identity better than others. Two experiments were designed to examine the relationship between likeness judgments and face matching accuracy. In Experiment 1, we compared unfamiliar face matching accuracy for self-selected and other-selected high-likeness images. Surprisingly, images selected by previously unfamiliar viewers - after very limited exposure to a target face - were more accurately matched than self-selected images chosen by the target identity themselves. Results also revealed extremel...
Everyday security tasks, such as passport control, require comparison of peoples’ faces with portrai...
Matching two different images of a face is a very easy task for familiar viewers, but much harder fo...
Background: Psychological research has largely overlooked that there is variability between photogra...
Psychological studies of face recognition have typically ignored within-person variation in appearan...
Photographs of people are commonly said to be ‘good likenesses’ or ‘poor likenesses’, and this is a ...
We examined the manipulability of face identity judgements by combining a sorting task for unfamilia...
Matching two different images of a face is a very easy task for familiar viewers, but much harder f...
Photographs of people are commonly said to be ‘good likenesses’ or ‘poor likenesses’, and this is a ...
Photographs are often used to establish the identity of an individual or to verify that they are who...
This thesis explores the mechanisms which underlie the improvement to face-identification which aris...
Matching two different images of a face is a very easy task for familiar viewers, but much harder fo...
Many security settings rely on the identity matching of unfamiliar people, which has led this task t...
<p>A. Self-recognition in photographs (not cropped and with context): The proportion of correct self...
Many security settings rely on the identity matching of unfamiliar people, which has led this task t...
Abstract People draw automatic social inferences from photos of unfamiliar faces and these first imp...
Everyday security tasks, such as passport control, require comparison of peoples’ faces with portrai...
Matching two different images of a face is a very easy task for familiar viewers, but much harder fo...
Background: Psychological research has largely overlooked that there is variability between photogra...
Psychological studies of face recognition have typically ignored within-person variation in appearan...
Photographs of people are commonly said to be ‘good likenesses’ or ‘poor likenesses’, and this is a ...
We examined the manipulability of face identity judgements by combining a sorting task for unfamilia...
Matching two different images of a face is a very easy task for familiar viewers, but much harder f...
Photographs of people are commonly said to be ‘good likenesses’ or ‘poor likenesses’, and this is a ...
Photographs are often used to establish the identity of an individual or to verify that they are who...
This thesis explores the mechanisms which underlie the improvement to face-identification which aris...
Matching two different images of a face is a very easy task for familiar viewers, but much harder fo...
Many security settings rely on the identity matching of unfamiliar people, which has led this task t...
<p>A. Self-recognition in photographs (not cropped and with context): The proportion of correct self...
Many security settings rely on the identity matching of unfamiliar people, which has led this task t...
Abstract People draw automatic social inferences from photos of unfamiliar faces and these first imp...
Everyday security tasks, such as passport control, require comparison of peoples’ faces with portrai...
Matching two different images of a face is a very easy task for familiar viewers, but much harder fo...
Background: Psychological research has largely overlooked that there is variability between photogra...