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Can caricatures really produce distinctiveness effects?

Can caricatures really produce distinctiveness effects?
Can caricatures really produce distinctiveness effects?
It has been shown that humans can remember faces of school mates over an interval of as long as 30 years (Bahrick, Bahrick & Wittlenger, 1975). One thing that may be crucial to the development of such a face capacity is the ability to encode the distinctive elements of a face. That is, the ability to identify the information that distinguishes a target face from some notion of an average face or central tendency. Distinctiveness has a well-documented effect on the ease with which a face is processed. Using faces that vary naturally in distinctiveness, it has been shown that the more atypical a face is the more likely it is to be correctly identified and the less likely it is to be mistakenly identified (Bartlett, Hurry & Thorley, 1984; Goldstein & Chance, 1981; Light, Kayra-Stuart & Hollander, 1979; Shepherd, Gibling & Ellis, 1991; Valentine & Bruce, 1986a; Winograd, 1981). Facial distinctiveness appears to confer a recognition advantage in such face recognition tasks.
0007-1269
127-146
Stevenage, Sarah V.
493f8c57-9af9-4783-b189-e06b8e958460
Stevenage, Sarah V.
493f8c57-9af9-4783-b189-e06b8e958460

Stevenage, Sarah V. (1995) Can caricatures really produce distinctiveness effects? British Journal of Psychology, 86, 127-146.

Record type: Article

Abstract

It has been shown that humans can remember faces of school mates over an interval of as long as 30 years (Bahrick, Bahrick & Wittlenger, 1975). One thing that may be crucial to the development of such a face capacity is the ability to encode the distinctive elements of a face. That is, the ability to identify the information that distinguishes a target face from some notion of an average face or central tendency. Distinctiveness has a well-documented effect on the ease with which a face is processed. Using faces that vary naturally in distinctiveness, it has been shown that the more atypical a face is the more likely it is to be correctly identified and the less likely it is to be mistakenly identified (Bartlett, Hurry & Thorley, 1984; Goldstein & Chance, 1981; Light, Kayra-Stuart & Hollander, 1979; Shepherd, Gibling & Ellis, 1991; Valentine & Bruce, 1986a; Winograd, 1981). Facial distinctiveness appears to confer a recognition advantage in such face recognition tasks.

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Published date: 1995

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 18618
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/18618
ISSN: 0007-1269
PURE UUID: 5e649b77-aff3-4094-9c2c-1ca0a1adb4b1
ORCID for Sarah V. Stevenage: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4155-2939

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Date deposited: 30 Nov 2005
Last modified: 12 Dec 2021 02:50

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