Publication | Closed Access
Young and old faces in young and old heads: The factor of age in face recognition.
120
Citations
19
References
1991
Year
AgingAgeismElderly SubjectsBiometricsFace RecognitionSocial SciencesPsychologyDevelopmental PsychologyFace DetectionFacial Recognition SystemLongevityCognitive DevelopmentOld HeadsStatisticsFace AgeCognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesGeriatricsSocial CognitionFacial Expression RecognitionMedicineAging Process
Research on aging and face recognition has shown age-related differences that are reflected most clearly in false-alarm errors. Elderly subjects exceed young adults in false recognitions that new faces are "old." To determine if this difference between young and elderly subjects might differ for young versus elderly faces, an experiment was conducted in which half of the young and elderly subjects studied and recognized young and middle-aged faces, and the remainder studied and recognized middle-aged and elderly faces. Replicating prior research, age-related deficits in recognition accuracy (d') were reduced with older faces, and this effect generalized from measures of face recognition to measures of face-picture recognition. However, the age-related increase in false recognitions of faces was not affected by face age.
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