Publication | Closed Access
Chess masters show a hallmark of face processing with chess.
69
Citations
34
References
2011
Year
Chess ExpertiseChess MastersCognitionAttentionSocial SciencesPsychologyFace DetectionFacial Recognition SystemCognitive ScienceVision ResearchComputer ScienceHuman CognitionFace ProcessingExperimental PsychologySocial CognitionVisual FunctionFacial Expression RecognitionSelective Attention FailureCognitive Psychology
Face processing has several distinctive hallmarks that researchers have attributed either to face-specific mechanisms or to extensive experience distinguishing faces. Here, we examined the face-processing hallmark of selective attention failure--as indexed by the congruency effect in the composite paradigm--in a domain of extreme expertise: chess. Among 27 experts, we found that the congruency effect was equally strong with chessboards and faces. Further, comparing these experts with recreational players and novices, we observed a trade-off: Chess expertise was positively related to the congruency effect with chess yet negatively related to the congruency effect with faces. These and other findings reveal a case of expertise-dependent, facelike processing of objects of expertise and suggest that face and expert-chess recognition share common processes.
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