Macquarie Home | Course Handbook | Library | Campus Map | Macquarie Contacts
Home page

Macquarie University ResearchOnline

Home
Add
-List Of Titles -The Use of dynamic cues in self and familiar face recognition

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/127041

186 Visitors 210 Hits 6 Downloads
FileDescriptionSizeFormat
DS01Publisher version (open access)3 MBAdobe Acrobat PDFView/Open
Title
The Use of dynamic cues in self and familiar face recognition
Related
Conference of the Australasian Society for Cognitive Science (9th : 2009) (30 September - 2 October 2009 : Sydney)
Related
Christensen, Wayne; Schier, Elizabeth and Sutton, John. ASCS09 : proceedings of the 9th Conference of the Australasian Society for Cognitive Science, p.21-27
DOI
10.5096/ASCS20094
Publisher
North Ryde, NSW : Macquarie Centre for Cognitive Science
Date
2010
FoR/RFCD Code(s)
080100 Artificial Intelligence and Image Processing  170200 Cognitive Sciences  170100 Psychology
Author/Creator
Bennetts, Rachel
Author/Creator
Burke, Darren
Author/Creator
Brooks, Kevin R
Author/Creator
Robbins, Rachel A
Description
Familiarity plays an important role in face processing. The importance of familiarity is increased when facial form cues are degraded, so that a person must rely primarily on movement (dynamic) information to identify someone. It is, however, unclear which dynamic cues are used for face recognition of both familiar and unfamiliar faces. Furthermore, little work has been done on dynamic self-face recognition, and none has focused on the type of movement that facilitates this process. The current study used motion capture cameras to record and isolate facial movements in order to test recognition of self, familiar and unfamiliar faces. Participants completed a 2AFC same/different face-matching task involving point-light displays of natural motion (i.e. both rigid and non-rigid motion), rigid motion only (e.g. nodding/shaking), non-rigid motion only (e.g. mouth/eyebrow motion) and still images to determine whether differences in familiarity resulted in the use of different movement cues. The manner (style) in which someone is speaking may also impact on whether they can be easily identified from dynamic cues. Consequently, speech style was either matched or mismatched between video clips. We found that matching performance was more accurate overall when speech style was matched than mismatched. Familiar face matching appears to use rigid, non-rigid and natural movement cues equally, but unfamiliar and self-face matching are more accurate for rigid than natural motion when speech style differs between clips. These results are discussed in relation to previous research on dynamic face recognition, and possible implications for current face processing models.
Description
7 page(s)
Subject Keyword
080100 Artificial Intelligence and Image Processing
Subject Keyword
170200 Cognitive Sciences
Subject Keyword
170100 Psychology
Subject Keyword
face recognition
Subject Keyword
self recognition
Subject Keyword
familiarity
Subject Keyword
motion capture
Subject Keyword
biological motion
Subject Keyword
speech type
Subject Keyword
perceptionaction coupling
Resource Type
ASCS09 : Proceedings Of The 9th Conference Of The Australasian Society For Cognitive Science
Resource Type
conference paper
Organisation
Macquarie University. Dept. of Psychology
Organisation
Macquarie University. Macquarie Centre for Cognitive Science

Identifier
http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/127041
Identifier
ISBN:9780646529189
Identifier
mq-rm-2009011776
Language
eng
Rights
Copyright 2009 by the Australasian Society for Cognitive Science. Publisher version archived with the permission of the Editor, ASCS09 : Proceedings of the 9th Conference of the Australasian Society for Cognitive Science. This copy is available for individual, non-commercial use. Permission to reprint/republish this version for other uses must be obtained from the publisher.
Full Text
Full Text
Reviewed
Reviewed
 
Image Thumbnail
Save/E-mail Citation
Citation Format
E-mail Address
Subject
"ASCS09 : proceedings of the 9th Conference of the Australasian Society for Cognitive Science"
 
OR
  • Show All  
  • Show My Selections 
Advanced Search

Search

080100 Artificial Intelligence and Image Processing
Brooks, Kevin R

Browse

  • By Title 
  • By Author/Creator 
  • By Department/Centre 
  • By Subject Keyword 
  • By Journal/Conference 
  • By FoR/RFCD codes 
  • By Resource Type 
  • By Date 

Highlights

  • Most Accessed Objects 
  • Recent Additions 
  • Pending Publications 
  • Author Profiles 

Resources

  • About ResearchOnline 
  • FAQ 
  • Open Access 
  • Open Access-FAQs 
  • Copyright 
  • Contribute 
  • Help 
  • Contact
  • Terms and Conditions 
Valid XHTML 1.0 Strict Powered by VITAL

Copyright Macquarie University | Privacy Statement | Accessibility Information

ABN 90 952 801 237 | CRICOS Provider No 00002J

Library Staff Sign In