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Individual differences in personality and face identification
65
Citations
33
References
2012
Year
Personality PsychologyUnfamiliar Face IdentificationEmotional ResponsePsychiatryBiometricsAffective NeuroscienceIndividual DifferencesSocial PsychologySocial SciencesFace TestPersonality DevelopmentEmotionSocial CognitionPsychologyFace Perception
Unfamiliar face identification is characterised by substantial variation between individual observers, but the cause of this variation is largely unknown. This study investigated whether individual differences in face identification are linked to an observer's personality, by combining performance on an established face-matching test with two in-depth personality assessments (the 16PF5 and the NEO-PI-R). The face test revealed a broad distribution in identification ability, but associations between face perception and personality were found only in female observers. In this group, correct face identifications related to low anxiety, low tension, and high emotional stability. These results suggest that associations between personality and face perception are limited, and are confined to anxiety and facets of neuroticism.
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