Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4036282 Vision Research 2006 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

The present study investigated the role of size and view on face discrimination, using a novel set of synthetic face stimuli. Face discrimination thresholds were measured using a 2AFC match-to-sample paradigm, where faces were discriminated from a mean face. In Experiment 1, which assessed the effect of size alone, subjects had to match faces that differed in size up to four-fold. In Experiment 2 where only viewpoint was manipulated, a target face was presented at one of four different views (0° front, 6.7°, 13.3°, and 20° side) and subsequent matches appeared either at the same or different view. Experiment 3 investigated how face view interacts with size changes, and subjects matched faces differing both in size and view. The results were as follows: (1) size changes up to four-fold had no effect on face discrimination; (2) threshold for matching different face views increased with angular difference from frontal view; (3) size differences across different views had no effect on face discrimination. Additionally, the present study found a perceptual boundary between 6.7° and 13.3° side views, grouping 0° front and 6.7° side views together and 13.3° and 20° side views together. This suggests categorical perception of face view. The present study concludes that face view and size are processed by parallel mechanisms.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Neuroscience Sensory Systems
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