AI Article Synopsis

  • Holistic processing is when we perceive objects as a complete whole instead of just their individual parts, which helps in developing perceptual expertise.
  • A study examined if latent fingerprint examiners use holistic processing when comparing crime scene fingerprints to suspect standards, using a task that requires matching half of a fingerprint while ignoring the other half.
  • Results showed weak evidence of holistic processing among both experts and novices, particularly with inverted fingerprints, suggesting that fingerprint processing may differ from other areas of expertise like face recognition, possibly due to the nature of the stimuli used.

Article Abstract

Holistic processing is often characterized as a process by which objects are perceived as a whole rather than a compilation of individual features. This mechanism may play an important role in the development of perceptual expertise because it allows for rapid integration across image regions. The present work explores whether holistic processing is present in latent fingerprint examiners, who compare fingerprints collected from crime scenes against a set of standards taken from a suspect. We adapted a composite task widely used in the face recognition and perceptual expertise literatures, in which participants were asked to match only a particular half of a fingerprint with a previous image while ignoring the other half. We tested both experts and novices, using both upright and inverted fingerprints. For upright fingerprints, we found weak evidence for holistic processing, but with no differences between experts and novices with respect to holistic processing. For inverted fingerprints, we found stronger evidence of holistic processing, with weak evidence for differences between experts and novices. These relatively weak holistic processing effects contrast with robust evidence for holistic processing with faces and with objects in other domains of perceptual expertise. The data constrain models of holistic processing by demonstrating that latent fingerprint experts and novices may not substantively differ in terms of the amount of holistic processing and that inverted stimuli actually produced more evidence for holistic processing than upright stimuli. Important differences between the present fingerprint stimuli and those in the literature include the lack of verbal labels for experts and the absence of strong vertical asymmetries, both of which might contribute to stronger holistic processing signatures in other stimulus domains.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5318483PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s41235-017-0051-xDOI Listing

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