Race-contingent aftereffects suggest distinct perceptual norms for different race faces

Faces of one's own race and of other races are thought to be located in different regions of face space (Valentine, 1991). Here we investigated whether faces of different races (Caucasian and Chinese faces) have dissociable neural coding and distinct norms. We used adaptation techniques to alter perceptions of normality (aftereffects) for faces. Caucasian and Chinese participants adapted to distorted faces of one race (e.g., Chinese contracted faces—Experiment 1), or oppositely distorted faces of both races (e.g., Chinese contracted and Caucasian expanded faces—Experiment 2). We then tested for aftereffects in Chinese and Caucasian test faces. In Experiment 1 aftereffects were reduced when a change in race between the adapt faces and test faces occurred. In Experiment 2 aftereffects occurred in opposite directions for the two races. These results demonstrate that dissociable neural populations code faces of different races and suggest the existence of race-specific face norms.

[1]  A. O'Toole,et al.  Prototype-referenced shape encoding revealed by high-level aftereffects , 2001, Nature Neuroscience.

[2]  C. Chubb,et al.  The size-tuning of the face-distortion after-effect , 2001, Vision Research.

[3]  C. Clifford,et al.  Pulling Faces: An Investigation of the Face-Distortion Aftereffect , 2003, Perception.

[4]  H. Barlow,et al.  Evidence for a Physiological Explanation of the Waterfall Phenomenon and Figural After-effects , 1963, Nature.

[5]  K. D. De Valois,et al.  Stimulus selectivity of figural aftereffects for faces. , 2005, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[6]  R. Jenkins,et al.  I Thought You Were Looking at Me , 2006, Psychological science.

[7]  G. Rhodes,et al.  Orientation-Contingent Face Aftereffects and Implications for Face-Coding Mechanisms , 2004, Current Biology.

[8]  M. Giese,et al.  Norm-based face encoding by single neurons in the monkey inferotemporal cortex , 2006, Nature.

[9]  Gillian Rhodes,et al.  Coding spatial variations in faces and simple shapes: a test of two models , 1998, Vision Research.

[10]  C. Clifford,et al.  Orientation dependence of the orientation-contingent face aftereffect , 2006, Vision Research.

[11]  P. Devine Stereotypes and prejudice: Their automatic and controlled components. , 1989 .

[12]  Rachel A Robbins,et al.  Adaptation and Face Perception - How Aftereffects Implicate Norm-Based Coding of Faces , 2005 .

[13]  H. Wilson,et al.  fMRI evidence for the neural representation of faces , 2005, Nature Neuroscience.

[14]  J. Frisby Seeing: Illusion, Brain and Mind , 1979 .

[15]  Rachel A Robbins,et al.  Aftereffects for face attributes with different natural variability: adapter position effects and neural models. , 2007, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[16]  T. Valentine,et al.  Towards an Exemplar Model of Face Processing: The Effects of Race and Distinctiveness , 1992, The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology. A, Human experimental psychology.

[17]  T. Valentine The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A: Human Experimental Psychology a Unified Account of the Effects of Distinctiveness, Inversion, and Race in Face Recognition , 2022 .

[18]  Otto H. MacLin,et al.  Figural aftereffects in the perception of faces , 1999, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[19]  G. Rhodes,et al.  Fitting the Mind to the World: Adaptation and after-effects in high-level vision , 2005 .

[20]  Gillian Rhodes,et al.  Recognition of own-race and other-race caricatures: implications for models of face recognition , 1998, Vision Research.

[21]  Doris Y. Tsao,et al.  What's so special about the average face? , 2006, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.

[22]  G. Rhodes,et al.  Adaptive norm-based coding of facial identity , 2006, Vision Research.

[23]  P. Dodwell,et al.  A functional theory of the McCollough effect. , 1990, Psychological review.

[24]  Linda Jeffery,et al.  View-specific coding of face shape. , 2010, Psychological science.

[25]  A. Little,et al.  Sex-contingent face after-effects suggest distinct neural populations code male and female faces , 2005, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.

[26]  G. Rhodes,et al.  Identification and ratings of caricatures: Implications for mental representations of faces , 1987, Cognitive Psychology.

[27]  Mathieu Gallay,et al.  Is face distinctiveness gender based? , 2006, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[28]  K. Nakayama,et al.  Fitting the mind to the World , 2003, Psychological science.

[29]  A. O'Toole,et al.  The perception of face gender: The role of stimulus structure in recognition and classification , 1998, Memory & cognition.

[30]  Joan Y. Chiao,et al.  Differential responses in the fusiform region to same-race and other-race faces , 2001, Nature Neuroscience.

[31]  J. Brigham,et al.  Thirty years of investigating the own-race bias in memory for faces: A meta-analytic review , 2001 .

[32]  A. Young,et al.  Understanding the recognition of facial identity and facial expression , 2005, Nature Reviews Neuroscience.

[33]  M. Webster,et al.  Adaptation and the Phenomenology of Perception , 2005 .