Journal of European Psychology Students (Sep 2013)

On the Face of it: Exploring the Interaction Between Racial and Arbitrary Group Recognition

  • Eva Berlot,
  • Robert Blakey,
  • Evelien Demaerschalk,
  • Jasna Dishlieska Mitova,
  • Sofia Petisca,
  • Carrie Philp,
  • Beatriz Lloret

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5334/jeps.bg
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 2
pp. 16 – 24

Abstract

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The cross-race effect – enhanced recognition of racial ingroup faces – has been justified to exist in other categories, such as arbitrary groups. This study aimed to investigate the effect of crossing racial (black/white) and arbitrary (blue/yellow) categories, in addition to the role of facial expressions in this phenomenon. 120 Caucasian students (from the UK, Macedonia, and Portugal) performed a discrimination task (judging faces as new vs. previously seen). Using a within-subjects design, reaction times and accuracy were measured. We hypothesized that (1) the arbitrary group membership of faces would moderate the cross-race effect and (2) the racial group membership of faces would moderate the usual recognition advantage for happy faces.

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