Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4036282 | Vision Research | 2006 | 10 Pages |
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.