AI Article Synopsis

  • People generally struggle to recognize faces of races different from their own, known as the "other-race effect," which is consistent across various ethnic groups.
  • The study explored how living in multiracial versus racially homogeneous environments affects this face recognition ability in White and East Asian adults, including immigrants.
  • Results revealed that multiracial cities lessen the other-race effect, indicating that people's experiences in diverse surroundings can enhance their ability to recognize faces from different racial backgrounds.

Article Abstract

People often find it more difficult to recognize other- than own-race faces. This other-race effect is robust across numerous ethnic groups. Yet, it remains unclear how this effect changes in people who live in a multiracial environment, and in immigrants whose lifetime perceptual experience changes over time. In the present study, we developed a novel face recognition test that approximates face recognition in the real world. We tested five groups of White and East Asian adults (n = 120) living in racially homogeneous versus heterogeneous cities and East Asians who immigrated to a multiracial city between infancy and adulthood. Multiracial cities reduce the other-race effect. The magnitude of the other-race effect changes as a function of experience, mirroring the racial diversity in perceivers' living environment. Our study highlights the challenge of forming reliable face representations across naturalistic facial variability and suggests a facilitative role of multiracial environments in eliminating the other-race effect.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9142532PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-11550-9DOI Listing

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