Contour grouping inside and outside of facial contexts |
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Authors: | Pomerantz James R Agrawal Alpna Jewell Stephen W Jeong Martha Khan Hana Lozano Sandra C |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, Rice University, MS 25, PO Box 1892, Houston, TX 77251-1892, USA. pomeran@rice.edu |
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Abstract: | We examine how contours group in isolation compared with when they are embedded in face-like contexts. As previously shown, contours that seem to group by phenomenological observation also show powerful effects on task performance: with contours that group, selective attention to one while ignoring another is poor (as indexed by Garner Interference (GI), but not Stroop Interference), whereas divided attention across contours is good. With contours that do not group, however, the reverse happens. Here we test pairs of curved lines (parentheses) displayed either in isolation or within contexts including cartoon faces, where these curves may serve as mouths or eyebrows. The results with isolated contours replicate previous findings of poor selective attention, but within face-like contexts the same contours showed nearly perfect selective attention (i.e., zero GI). Thus, contour grouping was weaker inside than outside of faces, a finding that contrasts with the widely-held belief that faces are processed configurally, not by local features. |
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Keywords: | 2323 2346 2320 2520 |
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