Article

Distinct abilities associated with matching same identity faces versus discriminating different faces: Evidence from individual differences in prosopagnosics and controls

Details

Citation

Berger A, Fry R, Bobak A, Juliano A & DeGutis J (2022) Distinct abilities associated with matching same identity faces versus discriminating different faces: Evidence from individual differences in prosopagnosics and controls. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology. https://doi.org/10.1177/17470218221076817

Abstract
Previous face matching studies provide evidence that matching same identity faces (match trials) and discriminating different face identities (non-match trials) rely on distinct processes. For example, instructional studies geared towards improving face matching in applied settings have often found selective improvements in match or non-match trials only. Additionally, a small study found that developmental prosopagnosics (DPs) have specific deficits in making match but not non-match judgments. In the current study, we sought to replicate this finding in DPs and examine how individual differences across DPs and controls in match vs. non-match performance relate to featural vs. holistic processing abilities. 43 DPs and 27 controls matched face images shown from similar front views or with varied lighting or viewpoint. Participants also performed tasks measuring featural (eyes/mouth) and holistic processing (part-whole task). We found that DPs showed worse overall matching performance than controls and that their relative match vs. non-match deficit depended on image variation condition, indicating that DPs do not consistently show match- or non-match-specific deficits. When examining the association between holistic and featural processing abilities and match vs. non-match trials in the entire group of DPs and controls, we found a very clear dissociation: Match trials significantly correlated with eye processing ability (r=.48) but not holistic processing (r=.11), whereas non-match trials significantly correlated with holistic processing (r=.32) but not eye processing (r=.03). This suggests that matching same identity faces relies more on eye processing while discriminating different faces relies more on holistic processing.

Keywords
face matching; developmental prosopagnosia; holistic processing; feature processing; eye processing; individual differences

Notes
Output Status: Forthcoming/Available Online

Journal
Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology

StatusIn Press
FundersThe Leverhulme Trust
Publication date online16/01/2022
Date accepted by journal10/11/2021
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/33864
ISSN1747-0218
eISSN1747-0226

People (1)

Dr Anna Bobak

Dr Anna Bobak

Senior Lecturer, Psychology