Children perceive illusory faces in objects as male more often than female

Face pareidolia is the experience of seeing illusory faces in inanimate objects. While children experience face pareidolia, it is unknown whether they perceive gender in illusory faces, as their face evaluation system is still developing in the first decade of life. In a sample of 412 children and a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cognition 2023-06, Vol.235, p.105398-105398, Article 105398
Hauptverfasser: Wardle, Susan G., Ewing, Louise, Malcolm, George L., Paranjape, Sanika, Baker, Chris I.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Face pareidolia is the experience of seeing illusory faces in inanimate objects. While children experience face pareidolia, it is unknown whether they perceive gender in illusory faces, as their face evaluation system is still developing in the first decade of life. In a sample of 412 children and adults from 4 to 80 years of age we found that like adults, children perceived many illusory faces in objects to have a gender and had a strong bias to see them as male rather than female, regardless of their own gender identification. These results provide evidence that the male bias for face pareidolia emerges early in life, even before the ability to discriminate gender from facial cues alone is fully developed. Further, the existence of a male bias in children suggests that any social context that elicits the cognitive bias to see faces as male has remained relatively consistent across generations. •Face pareidolia is the perception of illusory faces in objects.•Children and adults are more likely to perceive illusory faces as male than female.•The male bias for illusory faces occurs regardless of gender identification.•The male bias is present in children as young as 4–8 years of age.•The social context underlying the male bias is consistent across generations.
ISSN:0010-0277
1873-7838
DOI:10.1016/j.cognition.2023.105398