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Does response interference contribute to face composite effects?
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Does response interference contribute to face composite effects?

Jennifer J. Richler, Olivia S. Cheung, Alan C. -N. Wong and Isabel Gauthier
Psychonomic bulletin & review, Vol.16(2), pp.258-263
01/04/2009
PMCID: PMC3732653
PMID: 19293091

Abstract

Psychology, Experimental Psychology, Mathematical Psychology Social Sciences
Holistic processing of faces can be measured as a failure of selective attention to one face-half under instructions to ignore the other face-half in a naming or same/different matching task. But is interference from the irrelevant half due to response interference rather than to holistic processing? Here, participants learned to name two faces "Fred" and two "Bob," At test, composites were created from top and bottom halves of different learned faces or of a novel face, and composites were either aligned or misaligned. Naming was slower when the irrelevant half was from a different face as opposed to the same face, regardless of whether it was associated with the same name, a different name, or no name, suggesting holistic processing. Interference was eliminated when composite halves were misaligned. These results suggest that, unlike Stroop effects, composite effects are not due to response interference.
url
https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.3758%2FPBR.16.2.258.pdfView
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