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      Is Open Access

      Photo ID verification remains challenging despite years of practice

      research-article
      Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications
      Springer International Publishing
      Unfamiliar face matching, Expertise, Aging

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          Abstract

          Background

          Matching unfamiliar faces to photographic identification (ID) documents occurs across many domains, including financial transactions (e.g., mortgage documents), controlling the purchase of age-restricted goods (e.g., alcohol sales), and airport security. Laboratory research has repeatedly documented the fallibility of this process in novice observers, but little research has assessed individual differences based on occupational expertise (cf. White et al., PLoS One 9:e103510, 2014; White et al., Proceedings of the Royal Society B 282(1814):20151292, 2015). In the present study, over 800 professional notaries (who routinely verify identity prior to witnessing signatures on legal documents), 70 bank tellers, and 35 undergraduate students completed an online unfamiliar face-matching test. In this test, observers made match/nonmatch decisions to 30 face ID pairs (half of which were matches), with no time constraints and no trial-by-trial feedback.

          Results

          Results showed that all groups performed similarly, although age was negatively correlated with accuracy. Critically, weekly and yearly experience with unfamiliar face matching did not impact performance.

          Conclusions

          These results suggest that accumulated occupational experience has no bearing on unfamiliar face ID abilities and that cognitive declines associated with aging also manifest in unfamiliar face matching.

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          Most cited references40

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          Aging reduces neural specialization in ventral visual cortex.

          The present study investigated whether neural structures become less functionally differentiated and specialized with age. We studied ventral visual cortex, an area of the brain that responds selectively to visual categories (faces, places, and words) in young adults, and that shows little atrophy with age. Functional MRI was used to estimate neural activity in this cortical area, while young and old adults viewed faces, houses, pseudowords, and chairs. The results demonstrated significantly less neural specialization for these stimulus categories in older adults across a range of analyses. Copyright 2004 The National Academy of Sciencs of the USA
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            A Vast Graveyard of Undead Theories: Publication Bias and Psychological Science's Aversion to the Null.

            Publication bias remains a controversial issue in psychological science. The tendency of psychological science to avoid publishing null results produces a situation that limits the replicability assumption of science, as replication cannot be meaningful without the potential acknowledgment of failed replications. We argue that the field often constructs arguments to block the publication and interpretation of null results and that null results may be further extinguished through questionable researcher practices. Given that science is dependent on the process of falsification, we argue that these problems reduce psychological science's capability to have a proper mechanism for theory falsification, thus resulting in the promulgation of numerous "undead" theories that are ideologically popular but have little basis in fact.
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              Changing faces: visual and non-visual coding processes in face recognition.

              V Bruce (1982)
              Two experiments examined the effect of recognition accuracy and latency of changing the view of faces between presentation and test. In Expt 1, all the faces were unfamiliar to the subjects. Faces at test were either unchanged, or changed in angle (e.g. full face to 3/4), expression (e.g. smiling to unsmiling) or both. Unchanged faces were recognized more quickly and accurately than faces with a change in angle or expression which were in turn better than faces with both changed. In Expt 2, half the faces were highly familiar to the subjects, and at test unfamiliar and familiar faces were either unchanged or changed in both angle and expression. Unfamiliar faces were recognized more slowly and less accurately if changed at test, while familiar faces were recognized more slowly though no less accurately if change (though performance was effectively at ceiling). Familiar faces were recognized more quickly and accurately than unfamiliar, though false positive rates and rejection latencies were similar for familiars and unfamiliars. The results are discussed in terms of the combination of information from "pictorial', "structural', and "semantic' and "name' codes.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                mpapesh@lsu.edu
                Journal
                Cogn Res Princ Implic
                Cogn Res Princ Implic
                Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications
                Springer International Publishing (Cham )
                2365-7464
                27 June 2018
                27 June 2018
                December 2018
                : 3
                : 19
                Affiliations
                ISNI 0000 0001 0662 7451, GRID grid.64337.35, Department of Psychology, , Louisiana State University, ; Baton Rouge, LA 70803 USA
                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0002-9950-4369
                Article
                110
                10.1186/s41235-018-0110-y
                6019409
                30009249
                2786bdb0-4348-4aab-bc12-9f0660ef1619
                © The Author(s) 2018

                Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.

                History
                : 7 January 2018
                : 22 May 2018
                Funding
                Funded by: FundRef http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100000071, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development;
                Award ID: R01 HD075800-03
                Categories
                Original Article
                Custom metadata
                © The Author(s) 2018

                unfamiliar face matching,expertise,aging
                unfamiliar face matching, expertise, aging

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