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Learning to recognize face shapes through serial exploration

Authors
Wallraven, ChristianWhittingstall, LisaBuelthoff, Heinrich H.
Issue Date
May-2013
Publisher
SPRINGER
Keywords
Face recognition; Face processing strategies; Perceptual expertize; Learning; Serial encoding
Citation
EXPERIMENTAL BRAIN RESEARCH, v.226, no.4, pp.513 - 523
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
EXPERIMENTAL BRAIN RESEARCH
Volume
226
Number
4
Start Page
513
End Page
523
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/103322
DOI
10.1007/s00221-013-3463-y
ISSN
0014-4819
Abstract
Human observers are experts at visual face recognition due to specialized visual mechanisms for face processing that evolve with perceptual expertize. Such expertize has long been attributed to the use of configural processing, enabled by fast, parallel information encoding of the visual information in the face. Here we tested whether participants can learn to efficiently recognize faces that are serially encoded-that is, when only partial visual information about the face is available at any given time. For this, ten participants were trained in gaze-restricted face recognition in which face masks were viewed through a small aperture controlled by the participant. Tests comparing trained with untrained performance revealed (1) a marked improvement in terms of speed and accuracy, (2) a gradual development of configural processing strategies, and (3) participants' ability to rapidly learn and accurately recognize novel exemplars. This performance pattern demonstrates that participants were able to learn new strategies to compensate for the serial nature of information encoding. The results are discussed in terms of expertize acquisition and relevance for other sensory modalities relying on serial encoding.
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