Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
919704 Acta Psychologica 2015 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We examined the effect of social facilitation on face perception.•Participants, in the presence of others and alone, perform the composite face task.•Social presence increases recognition and reduces the composite face effect.•Social presence reduces interference produced by holistic processing

A robust finding in social psychology research is that performance is modulated by the social nature of a given context, promoting social inhibition or facilitation effects. In the present experiment, we examined if and how social presence impacts holistic face perception processes by asking participants, in the presence of others and alone, to perform the composite face task. Results suggest that completing the task in the presence of others (i.e., mere co-action) is associated with better performance in face recognition (less bias and higher discrimination between presented and non-presented targets) and with a reduction in the composite face effect. These results make clear that social presence impact on the composite face effect does not occur because presence increases reliance on holistic processing as a “dominant” well-learned response, but instead, because it increases monitoring of the interference produced by automatic response.

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