Self-pacing study of faces of different races: metacognitive control over study does not eliminate the cross-race recognition effect

People often recognize same-race faces better than other-race faces. This cross-race effect (CRE) has been proposed to arise in part because learners devote fewer cognitive resources to encode faces of social out-groups. In three experiments, we evaluated whether learners’ other-race mnemonic defici...

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Veröffentlicht in:Memory & cognition 2014-08, Vol.42 (6), p.863-875
Hauptverfasser: Tullis, Jonathan G., Benjamin, Aaron S., Liu, Xiping
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Benjamin, Aaron S.
Liu, Xiping
description People often recognize same-race faces better than other-race faces. This cross-race effect (CRE) has been proposed to arise in part because learners devote fewer cognitive resources to encode faces of social out-groups. In three experiments, we evaluated whether learners’ other-race mnemonic deficits are due to “cognitive disregard” during study and whether this disregard is under metacognitive control. Learners studied each face either for as long as they wanted (the self-paced condition) or for the average time taken by a self-paced learner (the fixed-rate condition). Self-paced learners allocated equal amounts of study time to same-race and other-race faces, and having control over study time did not change the size of the CRE. In the second and third experiments, both self-paced and fixed-rate learners were given instructions to “individuate” other-race faces. Individuation instructions caused self-paced learners to allocate more study time to other-race faces, but this did not significantly reduce the size of the CRE, even for learners who reported extensive contact with other races. We propose that the differential processing that people apply to faces of different races and the subsequent other-race mnemonic deficit are not due to learners’ strategic cognitive disregard of other-race faces.
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source MEDLINE; EBSCOhost Business Source Complete; Springer Nature - Complete Springer Journals
subjects Adult
Behavioral Science and Psychology
Biological and medical sciences
Cognitive Psychology
College students
Executive Function - physiology
Experiments
Face
Female
Fixed rates
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Human
Humans
Identity formation
Influence
Learning - physiology
Learning. Memory
Male
Memory
Metacognition
Pattern Recognition, Visual - physiology
Psychology
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychology. Psychophysiology
Racial Groups - psychology
Recognition, Psychology - physiology
Social Perception
Testimony
Young Adult
title Self-pacing study of faces of different races: metacognitive control over study does not eliminate the cross-race recognition effect
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