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Testing the limits of identity recognition with mixed-identity faces
{Similarly to how we look for telltale signs of both parents\textquoteright facial features in their children\textquoterights faces, we are able to recognize two identities from one photo that mixes two persons\textquoteright faces together. When more people\textquoterights faces are used to create mixed faces, the identities of individual faces (i.e., \textquotedblleftparent\textquotedblright faces) become less recognizable (i.e., identity information is degraded). In our study, we investigated the limit of identity recognition in such identity-degraded faces and whether familiarity with the \textquotedblleftparent\textquotedblright faces enhances identity recognition from such mixed faces. We first tested whether people can extract the identities from a mix of three faces. Participants who were familiar with the \textquotedblleftparent\textquotedblright faces performed better than those who were not. We then tested whether participants can extract the identities of mixed faces generated with more faces. We showed a mixed face of 2 to 10 \textquotedblleftparent\textquotedblright faces together with a test face. Participants had to decide whether the test face was a parent of the mixed face. Both familiar and unfamiliar participants performed better than chance for mixed faces generated with up to eight faces. Finally, we tested at what level mixed faces lose their identity so that we cannot discern between two mixed faces generated with completely different \textquotedblleftparent\textquotedblright faces. We presented two mixed faces in a trial and participants performed a same/different task. Both mixed faces had the same number of identities (2 to 32), but had no parents in common. Participants were better than chance even for the 32-face mixed faces. Together, these results indicate that our face processing system is extremely sensitive to facial identity information. Familiarity helps identity recognition, but this advantage becomes less evident when identity information degrades (i.e., with increased number of \textquotedblleftparent\textquotedblright faces in a mixed face).}
@misc{BulthoffZ2018, title = {{Testing the limits of identity recognition with mixed-identity faces}}, journal = {{Journal of Vision}}, abstract = {{Similarly to how we look for telltale signs of both parents\textquoteright facial features in their children\textquoterights faces, we are able to recognize two identities from one photo that mixes two persons\textquoteright faces together. When more people\textquoterights faces are used to create mixed faces, the identities of individual faces (i.e., \textquotedblleftparent\textquotedblright faces) become less recognizable (i.e., identity information is degraded). In our study, we investigated the limit of identity recognition in such identity-degraded faces and whether familiarity with the \textquotedblleftparent\textquotedblright faces enhances identity recognition from such mixed faces. We first tested whether people can extract the identities from a mix of three faces. Participants who were familiar with the \textquotedblleftparent\textquotedblright faces performed better than those who were not. We then tested whether participants can extract the identities of mixed faces generated with more faces. We showed a mixed face of 2 to 10 \textquotedblleftparent\textquotedblright faces together with a test face. Participants had to decide whether the test face was a parent of the mixed face. Both familiar and unfamiliar participants performed better than chance for mixed faces generated with up to eight faces. Finally, we tested at what level mixed faces lose their identity so that we cannot discern between two mixed faces generated with completely different \textquotedblleftparent\textquotedblright faces. We presented two mixed faces in a trial and participants performed a same/different task. Both mixed faces had the same number of identities (2 to 32), but had no parents in common. Participants were better than chance even for the 32-face mixed faces. Together, these results indicate that our face processing system is extremely sensitive to facial identity information. Familiarity helps identity recognition, but this advantage becomes less evident when identity information degrades (i.e., with increased number of \textquotedblleftparent\textquotedblright faces in a mixed face).}}, volume = {18}, pages = {157}, publisher = {Scholar One, Inc.}, address = {Charlottesville, VA}, year = {2018}, slug = {bulthoffz2018}, author = {B\"ulthoff, I and Zhao, M} }