Recognition memory for infant faces: An analog of the other-race effect
Tóm tắt
College adults’ recognition memory for and perception of resemblance among pictures of infants were tested in three experiments. Subjects had more difficulty recognizing briefly seen pictures of infants than pictures of adults, although those reporting some experience with infants did better than inexperienced subjects. In a second experiment, subjects rated adult male pictures as resembling each other more than infant pictures, but in a third experiment, when pairs of infant pictures and pairs of adult pictures were directly compared, infant pairs were more often chosen as being more alike than adult pairs.
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