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When the face fits: recognition of celebrities from matching and mismatching faces and voices

When the face fits: recognition of celebrities from matching and mismatching faces and voices
When the face fits: recognition of celebrities from matching and mismatching faces and voices
The results of two experiments are presented in which participants engaged in a face-recognition or a voice-recognition task. The stimuli were face-voice pairs in which the face and voice were co-presented and were either ‘matched’ (same person), ‘related’ (two highly associated people), or ‘mismatched’ (two unrelated people). Analysis in both experiments confirmed that accuracy and confidence in face recognition was consistently high regardless of the identity of the accompanying voice. However accuracy of voice recognition was increasingly affected as the relationship between voice and accompanying face declined. Moreover, when considering self-reported confidence in voice recognition, confidence remained high for correct responses despite the proportion of these responses declining across conditions. These results converged with existing evidence indicating the vulnerability of voice recognition as a relatively weak signaller of identity, and results are discussed in the context of a person-recognition framework
voice recognition, facial overshadowing effect, interference
0965-8211
1-12
Stevenage, Sarah V.
493f8c57-9af9-4783-b189-e06b8e958460
Neil, Greg J.
85453750-0611-48d9-a83e-da95cd4e80b3
Hamlin, Iain
4c76876e-1b18-4744-a7a6-a2b9ba270600
Stevenage, Sarah V.
493f8c57-9af9-4783-b189-e06b8e958460
Neil, Greg J.
85453750-0611-48d9-a83e-da95cd4e80b3
Hamlin, Iain
4c76876e-1b18-4744-a7a6-a2b9ba270600

Stevenage, Sarah V., Neil, Greg J. and Hamlin, Iain (2013) When the face fits: recognition of celebrities from matching and mismatching faces and voices. Memory, 1-12. (doi:10.1080/09658211.2013.781654). (PMID:23531227)

Record type: Article

Abstract

The results of two experiments are presented in which participants engaged in a face-recognition or a voice-recognition task. The stimuli were face-voice pairs in which the face and voice were co-presented and were either ‘matched’ (same person), ‘related’ (two highly associated people), or ‘mismatched’ (two unrelated people). Analysis in both experiments confirmed that accuracy and confidence in face recognition was consistently high regardless of the identity of the accompanying voice. However accuracy of voice recognition was increasingly affected as the relationship between voice and accompanying face declined. Moreover, when considering self-reported confidence in voice recognition, confidence remained high for correct responses despite the proportion of these responses declining across conditions. These results converged with existing evidence indicating the vulnerability of voice recognition as a relatively weak signaller of identity, and results are discussed in the context of a person-recognition framework

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e-pub ahead of print date: 26 March 2013
Keywords: voice recognition, facial overshadowing effect, interference

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 349259
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/349259
ISSN: 0965-8211
PURE UUID: c397a52a-c450-4ea4-99b1-b98c5bce79ce
ORCID for Sarah V. Stevenage: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4155-2939

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Date deposited: 27 Feb 2013 08:59
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 02:47

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Contributors

Author: Greg J. Neil
Author: Iain Hamlin

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