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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Face individuation involves sensitivity to physical characteristics that provide information about identity. We examined
whether Black and White American faces differ in terms of individuating information, and whether Black and White perceivers
differentially weight information when judging same-race and cross-race faces. Study 1 analyzed 20 structural metrics (e.g.,
eye width, nose length) of 158 Black and White faces to determine which differentiate faces within each group. High-utility
metrics (e.g., nose length, eye height, chin length) differentiated faces of both groups, low-utility metrics (e.g., face width,
eye width, face length) offered less individuating information. Study 2 (N = 4,510) explored Black and White participants’
sensitivity to variation on structural metrics using similarity ratings. High-utility metrics affected perceived dissimilarity more
than low-utility metrics. This relationship was non-significantly stronger for same-race faces rather than cross-race faces.
Perceivers also relied more on features that were racially stereotypic of the faces they were rating.
Description
Keywords
Intergroup processes Person perception Racial identity Social cognition Stereotypes
Pedagogical Context
Citation
Publisher
Sage