Volume 6, Number 12, Article 2, Pages 1356-1366 doi:10.1167/6.12.2 http://journalofvision.org/6/12/2/ ISSN 1534-7362
Where are kin recognition signals in the human face?
Maria F. Dal Martello
Dipartmento di Psicologia Generale, Università di Padova, Padova, Italy
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Laurence T. Maloney
Department of Psychology, Center for Neural Science, New York University, New York, NY, USA
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Abstract

We report two experiments that aimed to determine where in the face the cues that signal kinship fall. In both experiments, participants were shown 30 pairs of photographs of children's faces. Half of the pairs portrayed siblings and half did not. The 220 participants were asked to judge whether each pair of photographs portrayed siblings. We measured the effect on kin recognition performance of masks that covered the upper half or the lower half of the face (Experiment 1) and the eye region or the mouth region (Experiment 2). In Experiment 1, we found that the signal detection estimate of performance d′ decreased only 5.3% (ns) when the lower face was masked but by more than 65% when the upper face was masked. We tested whether the combination of kinship information from the two halves of the face can be treated as optimal combination of independent cues and found that it could be. In Experiment 2, we found that masking the eye region led to only a 20% reduction (ns) in performance whereas masking the mouth region led to a nonsignificant increase in performance. We also found that the eye region contains only slightly more information about kinship than the upper half of the face outside of the eye region.

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History
Received July 29, 2006; published November 28, 2006
Citation
Dal Martello, M. F., & Maloney, L. T. (2006). Where are kin recognition signals in the human face? Journal of Vision, 6(12):2, 1356-1366, http://journalofvision.org/6/12/2/, doi:10.1167/6.12.2.
Keywords
kin recognition, face perception, signal detection theory, cue combination
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