The Time Course of Composite Face Processing
Faces are considered a special class of holistically-processed object. The composite face task is a widely-used paradigm for inferring holistic processing. In this task, recognition of one half of a composite face is shown to be hampered by interference from the other half of the face when faces are aligned but not when misaligned. Although this effect has been documented numerous times, when used in different paradigms, composite faces do not always exhibit effects consistent with holism. The present study explored the cause of these discrepant findings by combining a composite face task with a signal-to-respond paradigm. The amount of time to make a face recognition decision was manipulated by introducing a response signal, and the resulting changes in accuracy were mapped over the time course of processing, which was then used to fit a speed-accuracy trade-off model. We found that holistic processing emerges late in the time course after approximately 400 ms processing time for easy to discriminate faces and after approximately 1000 ms for difficult to discriminate faces.
Keywords
Topics
There is nothing here yet. Be the first to create a thread.
Cite this as: