Publication | Closed Access
Eye remember you: the effects of gaze direction on face recognition in children and adults
157
Citations
22
References
2003
Year
Affective NeuroscienceIndividual DifferencesFace RecognitionCognitionPerceptionAttentionVisual Cognitive NeurosciencePsychologySocial SciencesEarly VisionVisual CognitionMemoryPsychophysicsCognitive ScienceEye GazeVision ResearchHuman CognitionEye ContactExperimental PsychologyImplicit MemoryVisual FunctionGaze DirectionEncoding AdvantagesRetrieval ManipulationEye TrackingAffect Perception
The study aimed to determine how gaze direction influences encoding and retrieval in face recognition. Participants performed a forced‑choice face recognition task in which gaze direction was varied during encoding (direct vs. deviated) and during retrieval (eyes closed vs.
Abstract Children and adults were tested on a forced‐choice face recognition task in which the direction of eye gaze was manipulated over the course of the initial presentation and subsequent test phase of the experiment. To establish the effects of gaze direction on the encoding process, participants were presented with to‐be‐studied faces displaying either direct or deviated gaze (i.e. encoding manipulation). At test, all the faces depicted persons with their eyes closed. To investigate the effects of gaze direction on the efficiency of the retrieval process, a second condition (i.e. retrieval manipulation) was run in which target faces were presented initially with eyes closed and tested with either direct or deviated gaze. The results revealed the encoding advantages enjoyed by faces with direct gaze was present for both children and adults. Faces with direct gaze were also recognized better than faces with deviated gaze at retrieval, although this effect was most pronounced for adults. Finally, the advantage for direct gaze over deviated gaze at encoding was greater than the advantage for direct gaze over deviated gaze at retrieval. We consider the theoretical implications of these findings.
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