Vision (Basel). 2025 Oct 15;9(4):88. doi: 10.3390/vision9040088. ABSTRACT Face recognition is an important skill that helps people make social judgments by identifying both who a person is and other characteristics such as their expression, age, and ethnicity. Previous models of…
Vision (Basel). 2025 Oct 15;9(4):88. doi: 10.3390/vision9040088.
ABSTRACT
Face recognition is an important skill that helps people make social judgments by identifying both who a person is and other characteristics such as their expression, age, and ethnicity. Previous models of face processing, such as those proposed by Bruce and Young and by Haxby and colleagues, suggest that identity and other facial features are processed through partly independent systems. This study aimed to compare the efficiency with which different facial characteristics are processed in a visual search task. Participants viewed arrays of two, four, or six faces and judged whether one face differed from the others. Four tasks were created, focusing separately on identity, expression, ethnicity, and gender. We found that search times were significantly longer when looking for identity and shorter when looking for ethnicity. Significant correlations were found among almost all tests in all outcome variables. Comparison of target-present and target-absent trials suggested that performance in none of the tests seems to follow a serial-search-terminating model. These results suggest that different facial characteristics share early processing but differentiate into independent recognition mechanisms at a later stage.
PMID:41133612 | PMC:PMC12550928 | DOI:10.3390/vision9040088