Adults’ face recognition abilities vary across face types, as evidenced by the other-race and other-species effects. Recent evidence shows that age is another dimension affecting adults’ performance in face recognition tasks, giving rise to an other-age effect (OAE). By comparing recognition performance for adult and newborn faces in a group of maternity-ward nurses and a control group of novice participants, the current study provides evidence for an experience-based interpretation of the OAE. Novice participants were better at recognizing adult than newborn faces and showed an inversion effect for adult faces. Nurses manifested an inversion cost of equal magnitude for both adult and newborn faces, and a smaller OAE in comparison to the novices. The results indicate that experience acquired exclusively in adulthood is capable of modulating the OAE, and suggest that the visual processes involved in face recognition are still plastic in adulthood, granted that extensive experience with multiple faces is acquired.
MACCHI CASSIA, V., Picozzi, M., Kuefner, D., Casati, M. (2009). Why mix-ups don’t happen in the nursery. Evidence for an experience-based interpretation of the other-age effect. THE QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 62(6), 1099-1107 [10.1080/17470210802617654].
Why mix-ups don’t happen in the nursery. Evidence for an experience-based interpretation of the other-age effect
MACCHI CASSIA, VIOLA MARINA;PICOZZI, MARTA ANNA ELENA;
2009
Abstract
Adults’ face recognition abilities vary across face types, as evidenced by the other-race and other-species effects. Recent evidence shows that age is another dimension affecting adults’ performance in face recognition tasks, giving rise to an other-age effect (OAE). By comparing recognition performance for adult and newborn faces in a group of maternity-ward nurses and a control group of novice participants, the current study provides evidence for an experience-based interpretation of the OAE. Novice participants were better at recognizing adult than newborn faces and showed an inversion effect for adult faces. Nurses manifested an inversion cost of equal magnitude for both adult and newborn faces, and a smaller OAE in comparison to the novices. The results indicate that experience acquired exclusively in adulthood is capable of modulating the OAE, and suggest that the visual processes involved in face recognition are still plastic in adulthood, granted that extensive experience with multiple faces is acquired.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.