The role of skin colour in face recognition.

Perception

Department of Psychology, Tel-Aviv University, Ramat Aviv, Tel-Aviv 69978, Israel.

Published: January 2010

People have better memory for faces from their own racial group than for faces from other races. It has been suggested that this own-race recognition advantage depends on an initial categorisation of faces into own and other race based on racial markers, resulting in poorer encoding of individual variations in other-race faces. Here, we used a study--test recognition task with stimuli in which the skin colour of African and Caucasian faces was manipulated to produce four categories representing the cross-section between skin colour and facial features. We show that, despite the notion that skin colour plays a major role in categorising faces into own and other-race faces, its effect on face recognition is minor relative to differences across races in facial features.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1068/p6307DOI Listing

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