Noyes Eilidh, Davis Josh P, Petrov Nikolay, Gray Katie L H, Ritchie Kay L
Department of Psychology, University of Huddersfield, Huddersfield HD1 3DH, UK.
School of Human Sciences, University of Greenwich, London SE10 9LS, UK.
R Soc Open Sci. 2021 Mar 24;8(3):201169. doi: 10.1098/rsos.201169.
Face masks present a new challenge to face identification (here matching) and emotion recognition in Western cultures. Here, we present the results of three experiments that test the effect of masks, and also the effect of sunglasses (an occlusion that individuals tend to have more experienced with) on (i) familiar face matching, (ii) unfamiliar face matching and (iii) emotion categorization. Occlusion reduced accuracy in all three tasks, with most errors in the mask condition; however, there was little difference in performance for faces in masks compared with faces in sunglasses. Super-recognizers, people who are highly skilled at matching unconcealed faces, were impaired by occlusion, but at the group level, performed with higher accuracy than controls on all tasks. Results inform psychology theory with implications for everyday interactions, security and policing in a mask-wearing society.
在西方文化中,口罩给面部识别(此处指匹配)和情绪识别带来了新的挑战。在此,我们展示了三项实验的结果,这些实验测试了口罩以及太阳镜(一种人们更常接触的遮挡物)对以下方面的影响:(i)熟悉面孔匹配,(ii)不熟悉面孔匹配,以及(iii)情绪分类。遮挡降低了所有三项任务的准确性,在口罩条件下错误最多;然而,戴口罩的面孔与戴太阳镜的面孔在表现上几乎没有差异。超级识别者,即那些在匹配未遮挡面孔方面非常熟练的人,会受到遮挡的影响,但在群体层面上,他们在所有任务中的表现都比对照组更准确。这些结果为心理学理论提供了信息,对戴口罩社会中的日常互动、安全和治安具有启示意义。