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Holistic Processing for Faces and Cars in Preschool-aged Children and Adults: Evidence from the Composite Effect

Overview
Journal Dev Sci
Specialty Psychology
Date 2009 Jan 16
PMID 19143797
Citations 31
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Abstract

The current study compared the development of holistic processing for faces and non-face visual objects by testing for the composite effect for faces and frontal images of cars in 3- to 5-year-old children and adults in a series of four experiments using a two-alternative forced-choice recognition task. Results showed that a composite effect for faces was present as early as 3 1/2 years, and none of the age groups tested showed signs of a composite effect for cars. These findings provide the first demonstration that holistic processing is already selective for faces in early childhood, and confirm existing evidence that sensitivity to holistic information in faces does not increase from 4 years to adulthood.

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