CCC: Face Recognition Flashcards

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1
Q

What are the difference models for face recognition?

A

Bruce & Youngs early model.
The IAC model of face recognition (Interaction Activation Model)

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2
Q

Is eyewitness model accurate/ inaccurate?

A

Highly inaccurate

Children even worse- pick up superficial traits- as we get older, we get better!

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3
Q

Bruce & Young 1986 Model

What is in the model?

A

Modular model- different sub sections are processed independently.

Distinct pathways for recognizing familiar faces vs recognizing expressions.

Parallel pathways for dealing with facial expression, facial speech, & “visually derived semantic information”- such as sex, age & race.

Different representations constructed for different purposes and for familiar vs. unfamiliar faces

For recognition, a familiar face activates a “Face Recognition Unit” – faces previously encountered.
FRUs (Face recognition units) are linked to “Person Identity Nodes”

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4
Q

Early Evidence for Bruce & Young (1986)?

A

Memory loss diary study (Young, Hay and Ellis,1985) they found common errors really supported this model- so there were lots of good things with this model.

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5
Q

Early Evidence for Bruce & Young (1986)

What are the most common errors?

A

Person not recognized (i.e., ‘blanked’).
– Feeling of familiarity without identity. (normally happens when people are out of context)
– Person recognized but no name retrieved.
– Person misidentified.
* Repetition priming found for familiarity decisions but not
for gender or expression decisions (Ellis et al. 1990).

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6
Q

Early Evidence for Bruce & Young (1986)

What does familiarity not influence?

A
  • gender decisions (Bruce, 1986).
    – expression analysis (Young et al.1986) since disputed
  • Humans can selectively attend to identity or emotion in
    sorting tasks (Etcoff, 1984).
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7
Q

What neuropsychological support is there for parallelism?

A

Double dissociation between the processing of facial
expression and face recognition.

Some have a deficit in Identity but not expression and vice versa

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8
Q

What Neuro-imaging support is there for parallelism:

A

Different cortical sites are active in the processing of
identity versus emotion (don’t worry about which sites!)

– Inferior occipital and lateral fusiform gyri activity:
Identity (yes) Expression (no) (Sergent et al. 1992).

– Amygdala and superior temporal sulcus activity:
Identity (no) Expression (yes) (Posamentier & Abdi, 2003).

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9
Q

What problem is there with the Bruce & Young model?

A

It couldn’t account for semantic priming!

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10
Q

What is semantic priming with face recognition?

A

Semantic priming- a face is responded to faster if it follows a closely related face (Prince Charles, followed by Diana), rather than an unrelated face.

No means to account for this using Bruce & Youngs model.

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11
Q

Interactive Activation and competition model (IAC model)

What did McClelland 1981 propose?

A

Proposed parallel distributed networks that have interactive activation and competition built in as basic processes.

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12
Q

IAC model

How is the knowledge shown?

A

Semantic information is “pooled”.

Knowledge is represented in “pools”

Relationships between different bits of knowledge are represented in the connections between the pools.

Connections between within a pool are mutually inhibitory.

Connections between pools are mutually facillitatory.

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13
Q

IAC model

What does mutually inhibitory mean?

A

If you activate one word in the category- you suppress the other words within that category.

e.g. if you activate the name Sam, all the other names in the category would be suppressed.

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