23
The Face and Person Perception: Insights from Social Cognition Kimberly A. Quinn and C. Neil Macrae

The Face and Person Perception: Insights from Social Cognition

  • Upload
    mrinal

  • View
    38

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

The Face and Person Perception: Insights from Social Cognition. Kimberly A. Quinn and C. Neil Macrae. Foundation of the study Social-cognitive dynamics of face perception Processing multiple social-category cues The categorization–identification interface Conclusion and Discussion. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: The Face and Person Perception: Insights from Social Cognition

The Face and Person Perception: Insights from

Social CognitionKimberly A. Quinn and C. Neil Macrae

Page 2: The Face and Person Perception: Insights from Social Cognition

Contents

I. Foundation of the studyII. Social-cognitive dynamics of face

perceptionIII. Processing multiple social-category cuesIV. The categorization–identification

interfaceV. Conclusion and Discussion

Page 3: The Face and Person Perception: Insights from Social Cognition

I. Foundation of the study

Understanding the dynamics of social categorization

Considering visual processing (bottom-up process) and semantic knowledge (top-down process) for understanding in face perception

Derived from Bruce and Young (1986) dual route model

Page 4: The Face and Person Perception: Insights from Social Cognition

Reminder of Bruce & Young theory

Page 5: The Face and Person Perception: Insights from Social Cognition

Main Focus

Debate of identity-nonspecific information’s role, and previous studies showed:

a. Dissociation between abstract generic information from faces and face recognition

b. Integrated processing of identity-specific and -nonspecific information

c. Explain where visually derived semantic codes related to identity-nonspecific information, and how extra-facial factors influence face processing -> social-cognitive perspective

Page 6: The Face and Person Perception: Insights from Social Cognition

II. Social-cognitive dynamics of face perception

Social perceivers automatically and inevitably perceive others according to visible dimensions such as sex, race, and age (Fiske, 1998)

Brewer’s (1988) dual-process model: perceivers choose implicitly between stereotyping and individuation

Fiske and Neuberg’s (1990) continuum model: priority to stereotyping and depicting individuation as a correction process

Page 7: The Face and Person Perception: Insights from Social Cognition

Brewer’s model (1988) primitive categorization

Fiske and Neuberg’s (1990) initial categorization

Emphasize social categorization of faces.

Page 8: The Face and Person Perception: Insights from Social Cognition

Social-cognitive models person perception rather than face recognition, and primarily to the construal of unfamiliar rather than familiar individuals.

These models assumed stereotyping sufficient for identity-specific information, therefore identity-non specific information processing is not needed.

Page 9: The Face and Person Perception: Insights from Social Cognition

III. Processing multiple social-category cues

Three experiments from Quinn and Macrae (2005)Experiment 1: showed social categorization need

an appropriate processing goalExperiment 2: if perceiver didn’t categorize

stimuli, the reaction times won’t be differ between repeated and new stimuli

Experiment 3: the efficiency of sex categorization depended on the age of a target, but age categorization was not influenced by variation in target sex.

Page 10: The Face and Person Perception: Insights from Social Cognition

a. Single category selection Perceiver using relevant dimension and

inhibit irrelevant ones. Quinn and Macrae (2005) second

experiment. Stereotype activation is also selective.Challenge on finding: Wiese, Schweinberger,

and Neumann (2008) recently reported ERP version of Quinn and Macrae’s multiple-category repetition-priming experiment.

Page 11: The Face and Person Perception: Insights from Social Cognition

b. Multiple-category integration Quinn & Macrae’s third experiment Freeman et.al easy and difficult-to-categorize faces’ task

Page 12: The Face and Person Perception: Insights from Social Cognition

c. Integrating processing of social-category cues and other social cues cues to differentiate sex (facial features and specific facial expression)

Male angry Female fear

Page 13: The Face and Person Perception: Insights from Social Cognition

gaze direction and emotional expression

There is still debate

Happy direct gaze

Fear averted gaze

Page 14: The Face and Person Perception: Insights from Social Cognition

race categorization and emotional expression

Anger expression identified faster in African people

Happy expression identified faster in Caucasian

Page 15: The Face and Person Perception: Insights from Social Cognition

Voice CuesRaki´c, Steffens, and Mummendey (2011), who used a ‘who said what?’ paradigm

to examine the separate and combined influences of voice and facial cues in person perception

Page 16: The Face and Person Perception: Insights from Social Cognition

Contextual cuesPerceivers do not categorize by race when another dimension of categorization is more useful in the ongoing context.Example: T-shirt colour denoted coalitions that race did not.

Page 17: The Face and Person Perception: Insights from Social Cognition

Social-cognitive evidence thus suggests that the processing of identity-nonspecific information in faces is extremely flexible and responsive to such factors as processing goals, semantic knowledge, and contextual cues.

Page 18: The Face and Person Perception: Insights from Social Cognition

IV. The categorization–identification interface

a. Social categorization influences identity recognition

‘cross-race’ or ‘other-race’ effect. social categorization also plays a critical role in

shaping own- and other-race face processing. Other race identity recognition could also be

sensitive to social categorization (making in-group and out-group)

Social categorization can even affect how individual features are perceived.

Emotional recognition

Page 19: The Face and Person Perception: Insights from Social Cognition

b. Identity recognition influences social categorization it is easier to extract categorical information from known versus unknown faces. before a perceiver can recognize a target’s unique identity, the target’s face must first receive basic visual processing. primacy of categorical thinking Identity recognition appears to be heavily reliant on the extraction of configural information across multiple features

Page 20: The Face and Person Perception: Insights from Social Cognition

Categorization vs identification Quinn, Mason, and Macrae (2010) used

automatic priming paradigm to investigate whether and when participants would automatically respond to unfamiliar and familiar others according to identity versus social category

Page 21: The Face and Person Perception: Insights from Social Cognition

V. Conclusion

Emphasis on the processing of identity-nonspecific (primarily social-category) information.

The contribution of social cognition face perception is twofold. a. social categorizationb. importance of extra-facial (prejudice)

Page 22: The Face and Person Perception: Insights from Social Cognition

A comprehensive account of face perception requires, at minimum, the consideration of three issues.a. Model should specify whether and how various forms of identity-specific and -nonspecific information are integratedb. Specify the downstream consequences of such integrationc. Make clear the nature and extent of online feedback from long-term memory during face processing.

Page 23: The Face and Person Perception: Insights from Social Cognition

Discussion

Which social categorization needed or automatically came out when we’re looking at a person?

Procedures and results in Quinn and Macrae’s study should be explained in more details.