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Neural Evidence for the Contribution of Holistic Processing but Not Attention Allocation to the Other-race Effect on Face Memory

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Publisher Springer
Date 2018 Jun 27
PMID 29943176
Citations 1
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Abstract

Multiple mechanisms have been suggested to contribute to the other-race effect on face memory, the phenomenon of better memory performance for own-race than other-race faces. Here, two of these mechanisms, increased attention allocation and greater holistic processing during memory encoding for own-race than other-race faces, were tested in two separate experiments. In these experiments event-related potentials were measured during study (the difference due to memory, Dm) and test phase (old/new effects) to examine brain activation related to memory encoding and retrieval, allowing for selective investigations of these memory sub-processes. In Experiment 1, participants studied own-race (Caucasian) and other-race (Chinese) faces under focused or divided attention. In Experiment 2, participants studied own-race (Caucasian) and other-race (African American) faces presented upright or upside down (i.e., inverted). Both experiments showed decreases in memory performance when attention allocation or holistic processing was reduced, but these effects were similar for own-race and other-race faces. Manipulations of holistic processing, but not attention allocation, influenced the neural other-race effects during memory encoding. Inverted own-race faces showed similar neural patterns as upright other-race faces, indicating that when holistic processing of own-race faces was reduced, these faces were encoded similarly as upright other-race faces. No influences of the experimental manipulations on other-race effects during memory retrieval were found. The present study provides the first neural evidence that increased holistic processing during memory encoding contributes to the other-race effect on face memory.

Citing Articles

More elaborate processing of own-race faces and less elaborate processing of other-race faces contribute to the other-race effect in face memory.

Herzmann G, Ogle O, Curran T Br J Psychol. 2022; 113(4):1033-1055.

PMID: 35773753 PMC: 9796842. DOI: 10.1111/bjop.12581.

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