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Consistency Face Identity Processing

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SeminarPast EventPsychology

Consistency of Face Identity Processing: Basic & Translational Research

Jeffrey Nador

University of Fribourg

Schedule
Thursday, November 18, 2021

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Schedule

Thursday, November 18, 2021

5:00 PM Europe/Berlin

Host: AFC Lab & CARLA Talk Series

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Format

Past Seminar

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Host

AFC Lab & CARLA Talk Series

Duration

70.00 minutes

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Abstract

Previous work looking at individual differences in face identity processing (FIP) has found that most commonly used lab-based performance assessments are unfortunately not sufficiently sensitive on their own for measuring performance in both the upper and lower tails of the general population simultaneously. So more recently, researchers have begun incorporating multiple testing procedures into their assessments. Still, though, the growing consensus seems to be that at the individual level, there is quite a bit of variability between test scores. The overall consequence of this is that extreme scores will still occur simply by chance in large enough samples. To mitigate this issue, our recent work has developed measures of intra-individual FIP consistency to refine selection of those with superior abilities (i.e. from the upper tail). For starters, we assessed consistency of face matching and recognition in neurotypical controls, and compared them to a sample of SRs. In terms of face matching, we demonstrated psychophysically that SRs show significantly greater consistency than controls in exploiting spatial frequency information than controls. Meanwhile, we showed that SRs’ recognition of faces is highly related to memorability for identities, yet effectively unrelated among controls. So overall, at the high end of the FIP spectrum, consistency can be a useful tool for revealing both qualitative and quantitative individual differences. Finally, in conjunction with collaborators from the Rheinland-Pfalz Police, we developed a pair of bespoke work samples to get bias-free measures of intraindividual consistency in current law enforcement personnel. Officers with higher composite scores on a set of 3 challenging FIP tests tended to show higher consistency, and vice versa. Overall, this suggests that not only is consistency a reasonably good marker of superior FIP abilities, but could present important practical benefits for personnel selection in many other domains of expertise.

Topics

consistencyface identity processingindividual differenceslaw enforcementmemorabilityneurotypical controlspsychophysical assessmentspatial frequencysuper recognizers

About the Speaker

Jeffrey Nador

University of Fribourg

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

www.researchgate.net/profile/Jeff-Nador/research

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