Despite recent advances in research on race and age biases, the question of how race and age experiences combine to affect young children’s face perception remains unexplored. To fill this gap, the current study tested two ethnicities of 3-year-old children using a combined cross-race/cross-age design. Caucasian children with and without an older sibling and Mainland Chinese children without an older sibling were tested for their ability to discriminate adult and child Caucasian faces as well as adult and child Asian faces in both upright and inverted orientations. Children of both ethnicities manifested an own-race bias, which was confined to adult faces, and an adult face bias, which was confined to own-race faces. Likewise, sibling experience affected Caucasian children’s processing of own-race child faces but this effect did not generalize to other-race faces. Results suggest that race and age information are represented at the same hierarchical level in young children’s memory
MACCHI CASSIA, V., Luo, L., Pisacane, A., Li, H., Lee, K. (2014). How race and age experiences shape young children’s face processing abilities. JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL CHILD PSYCHOLOGY, 120, 87-101 [10.1016/j.jecp.2013.11.016].
How race and age experiences shape young children’s face processing abilities
MACCHI CASSIA, VIOLA MARINA;
2014
Abstract
Despite recent advances in research on race and age biases, the question of how race and age experiences combine to affect young children’s face perception remains unexplored. To fill this gap, the current study tested two ethnicities of 3-year-old children using a combined cross-race/cross-age design. Caucasian children with and without an older sibling and Mainland Chinese children without an older sibling were tested for their ability to discriminate adult and child Caucasian faces as well as adult and child Asian faces in both upright and inverted orientations. Children of both ethnicities manifested an own-race bias, which was confined to adult faces, and an adult face bias, which was confined to own-race faces. Likewise, sibling experience affected Caucasian children’s processing of own-race child faces but this effect did not generalize to other-race faces. Results suggest that race and age information are represented at the same hierarchical level in young children’s memoryI documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.