When human subjects view photographs of faces, their judgments of identity, gender, emotion, age and attractiveness depend more on one side of the face than the other. We report an experiment testing whether allocentric kin recognition (the ability to judge the degree of kinship between individuals other than the observer) is also lateralized. One hundred and twenty four observers judged whether or not pairs of children were biological siblings by looking at photographs of their faces. In three separate conditions (1) the right hemi-face was masked, (2) the left hemi-face was masked, or (3) the face was fully visible. The measures for the masked left hemi-face and masked right hemi-face were 1.024 and 1.004 respectively (no significant difference) and the measure for the unmasked face was 1.079, not significantly greater than that for either of the masked conditions. We conclude, first, that there is no superiority of one or the other side of the observed face in kin recognition, second, that the information present in the left and right hemi-face relevant to recognizing kin is completely redundant, and last that symmetry cues are not used for kin recognition
Lateralization of Kin Recognition Signals in the Human Face
DAL MARTELLO, MARIA;
2010
Abstract
When human subjects view photographs of faces, their judgments of identity, gender, emotion, age and attractiveness depend more on one side of the face than the other. We report an experiment testing whether allocentric kin recognition (the ability to judge the degree of kinship between individuals other than the observer) is also lateralized. One hundred and twenty four observers judged whether or not pairs of children were biological siblings by looking at photographs of their faces. In three separate conditions (1) the right hemi-face was masked, (2) the left hemi-face was masked, or (3) the face was fully visible. The measures for the masked left hemi-face and masked right hemi-face were 1.024 and 1.004 respectively (no significant difference) and the measure for the unmasked face was 1.079, not significantly greater than that for either of the masked conditions. We conclude, first, that there is no superiority of one or the other side of the observed face in kin recognition, second, that the information present in the left and right hemi-face relevant to recognizing kin is completely redundant, and last that symmetry cues are not used for kin recognitionPubblicazioni consigliate
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