An identity-irrelevant discrimination task reveals familiarity-advantage in face perception and no self-advantage in voice perception

Whether or not self-face and self-voice are processed more accurately than others' remains inconclusive. Most previous studies asked participants to judge the presented stimulus as their own or as others', and compared response accuracy to discuss self-advantage. However, it is possible th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Acta psychologica 2024-07, Vol.247, p.104317, Article 104317
Hauptverfasser: Harada, Tamaka, Kamachi, Miyuki G., Yotsumoto, Yuko
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Whether or not self-face and self-voice are processed more accurately than others' remains inconclusive. Most previous studies asked participants to judge the presented stimulus as their own or as others', and compared response accuracy to discuss self-advantage. However, it is possible that participants responded correctly in the “other” trials not by identifying “other” but rather by rejecting “self.” The present study employed an identity-irrelevant discrimination task, in which participants detected the odd stimulus among the three sequentially presented stimuli. We measured the discrimination thresholds for the self, friend, and stranger conditions. In Experiment 1 (face), the discrimination thresholds for self and friends' faces were lower than those for strangers' faces. This suggests that self-face may not be perceived as special or unique, and facial representation may become more accurate due to increased familiarity through repetitive exposure. Whereas, in Experiment 2 (voice), the discrimination thresholds did not differ between the three conditions, suggesting that the sensitivity to changes is the same regardless of identity. Overall, we found no evidence for self-advantage in identification accuracy, as we observed a familiarity-advantage rather than self-advantage in face processing and a null difference in voice processing. •Examined whether self-face and voice are processed more accurately than others.•Demonstrated a familiarity effect in face perception.•Found no familiarity effects in voice discrimination thresholds.•Provided evidence suggesting a familiarity benefit with face stimuli but not with voice stimuli.
ISSN:0001-6918
1873-6297
1873-6297
DOI:10.1016/j.actpsy.2024.104317