AI Article Synopsis

  • People tend to recognize faces of their own race better than those of other races, a phenomenon known as own-race bias (ORB).
  • This bias can show up in different ways in research, sometimes revealing clear interactions between the race of the observer and the race of the faces they recognize.
  • A study involving white and black South Africans found that this bias was evident only when recognizing South African faces, suggesting that personal experience and interaction with one's own racial group play a significant role in face recognition.

Article Abstract

People are better at recognizing faces of their own race than faces of other racial groups. This own-race bias (ORB) in face recognition manifests in some studies as a full crossover interaction between race of observer and race of face, but in others the interaction is accompanied by main effects or other complexities. We hypothesized that this may be due in part to unacknowledged within-race variation and the implicit assumption that the terms white and black describe perceptually homogeneous race categories. We therefore tested white and black South Africans on their recognition of black and white American faces and black and white South African faces. Our results showed the expected interaction, but only for South African faces. This finding supports explanations of the ORB that are premised on intergroup contact and perceptual experience and highlights the danger of assuming homogeneity of appearance within groups.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3758/PBR.15.6.1089DOI Listing

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