Connecting developmental trajectories: Biases in face processing from infancy to adulthood

KS Scherf, LS Scott - Developmental psychobiology, 2012 - Wiley Online Library
The nature of the developmental trajectory of face recognition abilities from infancy through
adulthood is multifaceted and currently not well understood. We argue that the …

Meta-analytic review of the development of face discrimination in infancy: Face race, face gender, infant age, and methodology moderate face discrimination.

NA Sugden, AR Marquis - Psychological Bulletin, 2017 - psycnet.apa.org
Infants show facility for discriminating between individual faces within hours of birth. Over the
first year of life, infants' face discrimination shows continued improvement with familiar face …

Sex differences and the own-gender bias in face recognition: A meta-analytic review

A Herlitz, J Lovén - Visual Cognition, 2013 - Taylor & Francis
We review the literature on sex differences and the own-gender bias in face recognition. By
means of a meta-analysis, we found that girls and women remember more faces than boys …

Developmental origins of the other-race effect

G Anzures, PC Quinn, O Pascalis… - Current directions in …, 2013 - journals.sagepub.com
The other-race effect (ORE) in face recognition refers to better recognition memory for faces
of one's own race than faces of another race—a common phenomenon among individuals …

Caucasian infants scan own-and other-race faces differently

A Wheeler, G Anzures, PC Quinn, O Pascalis… - PloS one, 2011 - journals.plos.org
Young infants are known to prefer own-race faces to other race faces and recognize own-
race faces better than other-race faces. However, it is entirely unclear as to whether infants …

The own-race bias for face recognition in a multiracial society

HK Wong, ID Stephen, DRT Keeble - Frontiers in psychology, 2020 - frontiersin.org
The own-race bias (ORB) is a reliable phenomenon across cultural and racial groups where
unfamiliar faces from other races are usually remembered more poorly than own-race faces …

Three‐level meta‐analysis of the other‐race bias in facial identification

J Lee, SD Penrod - Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2022 - Wiley Online Library
The current research conducted a three‐level meta‐analysis with a total of 159 journal
articles on the other‐race bias in facial identification, which had been published between …

Through the eyes of the own-race bias: Eye-tracking and pupillometry during face recognition

EXW Wu, B Laeng, S Magnussen - Social neuroscience, 2012 - Taylor & Francis
People are generally better at remembering faces of their own race than faces of a different
race, and this effect is known as the own-race bias (ORB) effect. We used eye-tracking and …

Adults scan own-and other-race faces differently

G Fu, CS Hu, Q Wang, PC Quinn, K Lee - PloS one, 2012 - journals.plos.org
It is well established that individuals show an other-race effect (ORE) in face recognition:
they recognize own-race faces better than other-race faces. The present study tested the …

Biracial and monoracial infant own‐race face perception: An eye tracking study

SE Gaither, K Pauker, SP Johnson - Developmental science, 2012 - Wiley Online Library
We know that early experience plays a crucial role in the development of face processing,
but we know little about how infants learn to distinguish faces from different races, especially …