TY - JOUR
T1 - A Robust Method of Measuring Other-Race and Other-Ethnicity Effects
T2 - The Cambridge Face Memory Test Format
AU - McKone, Elinor
AU - Stokes, Sacha
AU - Liu, Jia
AU - Cohan, Sarah
AU - Fiorentini, Chiara
AU - Pidcock, Madeleine
AU - Yovel, Galit
AU - Broughton, Mary
AU - Pelleg, Michel
PY - 2012/10/30
Y1 - 2012/10/30
N2 - Other-race and other-ethnicity effects on face memory have remained a topic of consistent research interest over several decades, across fields including face perception, social psychology, and forensic psychology (eyewitness testimony). Here we demonstrate that the Cambridge Face Memory Test format provides a robust method for measuring these effects. Testing the Cambridge Face Memory Test original version (CFMT-original; European-ancestry faces from Boston USA) and a new Cambridge Face Memory Test Chinese (CFMT-Chinese), with European and Asian observers, we report a race-of-face by race-of-observer interaction that was highly significant despite modest sample size and despite observers who had quite high exposure to the other race. We attribute this to high statistical power arising from the very high internal reliability of the tasks. This power also allows us to demonstrate a much smaller within-race other ethnicity effect, based on differences in European physiognomy between Boston faces/observers and Australian faces/observers (using the CFMT-Australian).
AB - Other-race and other-ethnicity effects on face memory have remained a topic of consistent research interest over several decades, across fields including face perception, social psychology, and forensic psychology (eyewitness testimony). Here we demonstrate that the Cambridge Face Memory Test format provides a robust method for measuring these effects. Testing the Cambridge Face Memory Test original version (CFMT-original; European-ancestry faces from Boston USA) and a new Cambridge Face Memory Test Chinese (CFMT-Chinese), with European and Asian observers, we report a race-of-face by race-of-observer interaction that was highly significant despite modest sample size and despite observers who had quite high exposure to the other race. We attribute this to high statistical power arising from the very high internal reliability of the tasks. This power also allows us to demonstrate a much smaller within-race other ethnicity effect, based on differences in European physiognomy between Boston faces/observers and Australian faces/observers (using the CFMT-Australian).
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84868152471&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1371/journal.pone.0047956
DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0047956
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AN - SCOPUS:84868152471
SN - 1932-6203
VL - 7
JO - PLoS ONE
JF - PLoS ONE
IS - 10
M1 - e47956
ER -