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An own gender bias and the importance of hair in face recognition
Authors:Wright Daniel B  Sladden Benjamin
Affiliation:Psychology Department, University of Sussex, Brighton BN1 9QH, UK. danw@sussex.ac.uk
Abstract:There is a large literature on the own race bias, the finding that people are better at recognizing faces of people from their own race. Here an own gender bias is shown: Males are better at identifying male faces than female faces and females are better at identifying female faces than male faces. Encoding a person's hair is shown to account for approximately half of the own gender bias when measured using hit and false alarm rates. Remember/know judgements and confidence measures are taken. Encoding a person's hair is critical for having a "remember" recollective experience. Parallels with the own race bias and implications for eyewitness testimony are discussed.
Keywords:2343
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