Shape, color and the other-race effect in the infant brain.

The 'other-race' effect describes the phenomenon in which faces are difficult to distinguish from one another if they belong to an ethnic or racial group to which the observer has had little exposure. Adult observers typically display multiple forms of recognition error for other-race faces, and infants exhibit behavioral evidence of a developing other-race effect at about 9 months of age. The neural correlates of the adult other-race effect have been identified using ERPs and fMRI, but the effects of racial category on infants' neural response to face stimuli have to date not been described. We examine two distinct components of the infant ERP response to human faces and demonstrate through the use of computer-generated 'hybrid' faces that the observed other-race effect is not the result of low-level sensitivity to 3D shape and color differences between the stimuli. Rather, differential processing depends critically on the joint encoding of race-specific features.

[1]  Teodora Gliga,et al.  Structural Encoding of Body and Face in Human Infants and Adults , 2005, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[2]  B. Balas,et al.  Personal Familiarity Influences the Processing of Upright and Inverted Faces in Infants , 2009, Front. Hum. Neurosci..

[3]  Richard Russell,et al.  Sex, Beauty, and the Relative Luminance of Facial Features , 2003, Perception.

[4]  P. Kuhl,et al.  Infants show a facilitation effect for native language phonetic perception between 6 and 12 months. , 2006, Developmental science.

[5]  S. Luck An Introduction to the Event-Related Potential Technique , 2005 .

[6]  Mark H Johnson,et al.  Face-sensitive cortical processing in early infancy. , 2004, Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines.

[7]  O. Pascalis,et al.  Plasticity of face processing in infancy. , 2005, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[8]  T. Ito,et al.  The influence of processing objectives on the perception of faces: An ERP study of race and gender perception , 2005, Cognitive, affective & behavioral neuroscience.

[9]  M. Tarr,et al.  Gender Recognition of Human Faces Using Color , 2008, Psychological science.

[10]  C. Nelson The Development and Neural Bases of Face Recognition , 2001 .

[11]  Y. Bar-Haim,et al.  Nature and Nurture in Own-Race Face Processing , 2006, Psychological science.

[12]  I. Biederman,et al.  Is Pigmentation Important for Face Recognition? Evidence from Contrast Negation , 2006, Perception.

[13]  A. Young,et al.  Configurational Information in Face Perception , 1987, Perception.

[14]  Olivier Pascalis,et al.  Specialization of Neural Mechanisms Underlying Face Recognition in Human Infants , 2002, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[15]  S. de Schonen,et al.  Recognition of own-race and other-race faces by three-month-old infants. , 2004, Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines.

[16]  S. Schweinberger,et al.  Expertise and own-race bias in face processing: an event-related potential study , 2008, Neuroreport.

[17]  C. Nelson,et al.  Neural Correlates of Human and Monkey Face Processing in 9-Month-Old Infants. , 2006, Infancy : the official journal of the International Society on Infant Studies.

[18]  D. Levin Race as a visual feature: using visual search and perceptual discrimination tasks to understand face categories and the cross-race recognition deficit. , 2000, Journal of experimental psychology. General.

[19]  T. Poggio,et al.  I think I know that face... , 1996, Nature.

[20]  C. Nelson,et al.  Featural and Configural Face Processing in Adults and Infants: A Behavioral and Electrophysiological Investigation , 2006, Perception.

[21]  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 .

[22]  S. L. Sporer,et al.  Recognizing faces of other ethnic groups: An integration of theories. , 2001 .

[23]  O. Pascalis,et al.  Categorization, categorical perception, and asymmetry in infants' representation of face race. , 2009, Developmental science.

[24]  Thomas Vetter,et al.  A morphable model for the synthesis of 3D faces , 1999, SIGGRAPH.

[25]  James W. Tanaka,et al.  The Other-Race Effect in Infancy: Evidence Using a Morphing Technique. , 2007, Infancy : the official journal of the International Society on Infant Studies.

[26]  R. Malpass,et al.  Recognition for faces of own and other race. , 1969, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[27]  Ramesh S Bhatt,et al.  Race-based perceptual asymmetries underlying face processing in infancy , 2009, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

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

[29]  P. Sinha,et al.  Real-World Face Recognition: The Importance of Surface Reflectance Properties , 2007, Perception.

[30]  Mark H. Johnson,et al.  Cortical specialisation for face processing: face-sensitive event-related potential components in 3- and 12-month-old infants , 2003, NeuroImage.

[31]  H. Ellis,et al.  Identification of Familiar and Unfamiliar Faces from Internal and External Features: Some Implications for Theories of Face Recognition , 1979, Perception.

[32]  Benjamin Balas,et al.  The role of face shape and pigmentation in other-race face perception: An electrophysiological study , 2010, Neuropsychologia.

[33]  O. Pascalis,et al.  Is Face Processing Species-Specific During the First Year of Life? , 2002, Science.

[34]  O. Pascalis,et al.  Three-month-olds, but not newborns, prefer own-race faces. , 2005, Developmental science.

[35]  Mark H Johnson,et al.  Development of face-sensitive event-related potentials during infancy: a review. , 2003, International journal of psychophysiology : official journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology.

[36]  O. Pascalis,et al.  The Other-Race Effect Develops During Infancy , 2007, Psychological science.

[37]  Gunter Loffler,et al.  Synthetic faces, face cubes, and the geometry of face space , 2002, Vision Research.

[38]  Katherine D. Kinzler,et al.  An Ambiguous-Race Illusion in Children's Face Memory , 2007 .

[39]  B Renault,et al.  Face versus non-face object perception and the ‘other-race’ effect: a spatio-temporal event-related potential study , 2003, Clinical Neurophysiology.