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      The “Parts and Wholes” of Face Recognition: A Review of the Literature

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      Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology
      Informa UK Limited

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          Abstract

          It has been claimed that faces are recognized as a "whole" rather than by the recognition of individual parts. In a paper published in the Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology in 1993, Martha Farah and I attempted to operationalize the holistic claim using the part/whole task. In this task, participants studied a face and then their memory presented in isolation and in the whole face. Consistent with the holistic view, recognition of the part was superior when tested in the whole-face condition compared to when it was tested in isolation. The "whole face" or holistic advantage was not found for faces that were inverted, or scrambled, nor for non-face objects, suggesting that holistic encoding was specific to normal, intact faces. In this paper, we reflect on the part/whole paradigm and how it has contributed to our understanding of what it means to recognize a face as a "whole" stimulus. We describe the value of part/whole task for developing theories of holistic and non-holistic recognition of faces and objects. We discuss the research that has probed the neural substrates of holistic processing in healthy adults and people with prosopagnosia and autism. Finally, we examine how experience shapes holistic face recognition in children and recognition of own- and other-race faces in adults. The goal of this article is to summarize the research on the part/whole task and speculate on how it has informed our understanding of holistic face processing.

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          Most cited references58

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          Encoding specificity and retrieval processes in episodic memory.

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            Looking at upside-down faces.

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              Thirty years of investigating the own-race bias in memory for faces: A meta-analytic review.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology
                Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology
                Informa UK Limited
                1747-0218
                1747-0226
                January 2018
                January 2018
                : 69
                : 10
                : 1876-1889
                Article
                10.1080/17470218.2016.1146780
                5051945
                26886495
                33eb740f-50de-420f-9ab3-28d4efa23516
                © 2018

                http://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license

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