Navon-induced processing biases fail to affect the recognition of whole faces and isolated facial features

Abstract

According to the processing bias account, global Navon-induced processing primes the adoption of a holistic strategy whereas local Navon-induced processing triggers featural processing. As faces are recognised at a holistic level, global Navon-induced processing would increase recognition accuracy of whole faces. In contrast, local Navon-induced processing would enhance the recognition of individual facial features. In two experiments we explored this account using the part/whole task. Observers were asked to recognise facial features presented in isolation or embedded into whole faces, after global or local Navon-induced processing. In both experiments, results showed a whole-over-part advantage whereby facial features were recognised more accurately in the context of the whole face than in isolation. However, Navon-induced processing failed to modulate this effect as well as the magnitude of holistic-featural face processing. These results cast doubts on the reliability of Navon processing to prime the adoption of a particular processing style for face identification.

Publication
Journal of Cognitive Psychology, 34(6)
Alejandro J. Estudillo
Alejandro J. Estudillo
Senior Lecturer in Psychology

My research interests include face and object recognition, numerical cognition, neuropsychology, etc.

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