Hills and Lewis (2011) have demonstrated that the own-race bias in face recognition can be reduced or even removed by guiding participants' attention and potentially eye movements to the most diagnostic visual features. Using the same old/new recognition paradigm as Hills and Lewis, we recorded Black and White participants' eye movements whilst viewing Black and White faces following fixation crosses that preceded the bridge of the nose (between the eyes) or the tip of the nose. White faces were more accurately recognized when following high fixation crosses (that preceded the bridge of the nose) than when following low fixation crosses. The converse was true for Black faces. These effects were independent of participant race. The fixation ...
AbstractRecent studies have shown that participants use different eye movement strategies when scann...
AbstractRace categorization of faces is a fast and automatic process and is known to affect further ...
Face recognition is an important factor in everyday social interaction. Bruce and Young\u27s (1986) ...
Hills and Lewis (2011) have demonstrated that the own-race bias in face recognition can be reduced o...
Hills and Lewis (2006) reduced White participants’ own-race bias (ORB) in face recognition by traini...
Own-race faces are recognised more accurately than other-race faces and may even be viewed different...
The own-race bias (ORB) in face recognition can be interpreted as a failure to generalise expert per...
The own-race bias (ORB) in face recognition can be interpreted as a failure to generalize expert per...
Eye movements of twelve Caucasian participants were measured whilst they performed a recognition tes...
Race categorization of faces is a fast and automatic process and is known to affect further face pro...
In a previous study we paired Asian to Caucasian faces and exchanged a single facial feature between...
The present study aimed to investigate whether the faster change detection in own race faces in a ch...
Hills, Ross, and Lewis (2011) introduced the concept that the face-inversion effect may, in part, be...
AbstractRecent studies have shown that participants use different eye movement strategies when scann...
AbstractRace categorization of faces is a fast and automatic process and is known to affect further ...
Face recognition is an important factor in everyday social interaction. Bruce and Young\u27s (1986) ...
Hills and Lewis (2011) have demonstrated that the own-race bias in face recognition can be reduced o...
Hills and Lewis (2006) reduced White participants’ own-race bias (ORB) in face recognition by traini...
Own-race faces are recognised more accurately than other-race faces and may even be viewed different...
The own-race bias (ORB) in face recognition can be interpreted as a failure to generalise expert per...
The own-race bias (ORB) in face recognition can be interpreted as a failure to generalize expert per...
Eye movements of twelve Caucasian participants were measured whilst they performed a recognition tes...
Race categorization of faces is a fast and automatic process and is known to affect further face pro...
In a previous study we paired Asian to Caucasian faces and exchanged a single facial feature between...
The present study aimed to investigate whether the faster change detection in own race faces in a ch...
Hills, Ross, and Lewis (2011) introduced the concept that the face-inversion effect may, in part, be...
AbstractRecent studies have shown that participants use different eye movement strategies when scann...
AbstractRace categorization of faces is a fast and automatic process and is known to affect further ...
Face recognition is an important factor in everyday social interaction. Bruce and Young\u27s (1986) ...