6533b859fe1ef96bd12b8276
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Configural information in gender categorisation.
Glyn W. HumphreysJean-yves Baudouinsubject
AdultMaleINVERTED FACESAdolescentExperimental psychologymedia_common.quotation_subject[SHS.PSY]Humanities and Social Sciences/PsychologyFace (sociological concept)050109 social psychologyExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyModels PsychologicalFacial recognition system050105 experimental psychology[ SHS.PSY ] Humanities and Social Sciences/PsychologyJudgmentDISTINCTIVENESSArtificial IntelligencePerceptionOrientationReaction TimeHumansINVERSION0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesParallelsmedia_commonPERCEPTIONPsychological TestsPARTS05 social sciencesRECOGNITIONCognitionRecognition PsychologyDIFFERENCECOMPONENTSensory SystemsOphthalmologyExpression (architecture)CategorizationPattern Recognition VisualUPRIGHTFaceFemaleSexUPSIDE-DOWN FACESPsychologySocial psychologyPhotic Stimulationdescription
International audience; The role of configural information in gender categorisation was Studied by aligning the top half of one face with the bottom half of another. The two faces had the same or different genders. Experiment I shows that participants were slower and made more errors in categorising the gender in either half of these composite faces when the two faces had a different gender, relative to control conditions where the two faces were nonaligned or had the same gender. This result parallels the composite effect for face recognition (Young et al. 1987 Perception 16 747 - 759) and facial-expression recognition (Calder et al. 2000 Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance 26 527-551). Similarly to responses to face identity and expression, the composite effect on gender discrimination was disrupted by inverting the faces (experiment 2). Both experiments also show that the composite paradigm is sensitive to general contextual interference in gender categorisation.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2006-01-01 | Perception |