TY - JOUR
T1 - Perceptual experience shapes our ability to categorize faces by national origin
T2 - A new other-race effect
AU - Thorup, Bianca
AU - Crookes, Kate
AU - Chang, Paul P.W.
AU - Burton, Nichola
AU - Pond, Stephen
AU - Li, Tze Kwan
AU - Hsiao, Janet
AU - Rhodes, Gillian
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 The British Psychological Society
PY - 2018/8
Y1 - 2018/8
N2 - People are better at recognizing own-race than other-race faces. This other-race effect has been argued to be the result of perceptual expertise, whereby face-specific perceptual mechanisms are tuned through experience. We designed new tasks to determine whether other-race effects extend to categorizing faces by national origin. We began by selecting sets of face stimuli for these tasks that are typical in appearance for each of six nations (three Caucasian, three Asian) according to people from those nations (Study 1). Caucasian and Asian participants then categorized these faces by national origin (Study 2). Own-race faces were categorized more accurately than other-race faces. In contrast, Asian American participants, with more extensive other-race experience than the first Asian group, categorized other-race faces better than own-race faces, demonstrating a reversal of the other-race effect. Therefore, other-race effects extend to the ability to categorize faces by national origin, but only if participants have greater perceptual experience with own-race, than other-race faces. Study 3 ruled out non-perceptual accounts by showing that Caucasian and Asian faces were sorted more accurately by own-race than other-race participants, even in a sorting task without any explicit labelling required. Together, our results demonstrate a new other-race effect in sensitivity to national origin of faces that is linked to perceptual expertise.
AB - People are better at recognizing own-race than other-race faces. This other-race effect has been argued to be the result of perceptual expertise, whereby face-specific perceptual mechanisms are tuned through experience. We designed new tasks to determine whether other-race effects extend to categorizing faces by national origin. We began by selecting sets of face stimuli for these tasks that are typical in appearance for each of six nations (three Caucasian, three Asian) according to people from those nations (Study 1). Caucasian and Asian participants then categorized these faces by national origin (Study 2). Own-race faces were categorized more accurately than other-race faces. In contrast, Asian American participants, with more extensive other-race experience than the first Asian group, categorized other-race faces better than own-race faces, demonstrating a reversal of the other-race effect. Therefore, other-race effects extend to the ability to categorize faces by national origin, but only if participants have greater perceptual experience with own-race, than other-race faces. Study 3 ruled out non-perceptual accounts by showing that Caucasian and Asian faces were sorted more accurately by own-race than other-race participants, even in a sorting task without any explicit labelling required. Together, our results demonstrate a new other-race effect in sensitivity to national origin of faces that is linked to perceptual expertise.
KW - categorisation task
KW - experience
KW - face perception
KW - other-race effect
KW - perceptual expertise
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85042360182&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/bjop.12289
DO - 10.1111/bjop.12289
M3 - Article
C2 - 29473146
AN - SCOPUS:85042360182
SN - 0007-1269
VL - 109
SP - 583
EP - 603
JO - British Journal of Psychology
JF - British Journal of Psychology
IS - 3
ER -