Categorization and perceptual learning: An analogue of the face inversion effect

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Abstract

This paper reports two experiments that investigate the extent to which it is plausible to suppose that an associatively based mechanism for perceptual learning acts as the basis for the effects of inversion on identification, recognition, matching and discrimination of faces (and certain other stimuli rendered familiar by expertise, e.g. gundogs). In the first experiment, an inversion effect that is contingent both on familiarity with a category and on the category possessing prototypical structure is demonstrated using discrimination learning of chequerboard stimuli. The second experiment demonstrates that the inversion effect found in Experiment 1 can generalize to a recognition paradigm as well. These results are discussed within the framework provided by associative learning theory, and a parallel is drawn with models employing a norm-based coding in similarity space. The conclusion is that it would be remarkable if the inversion effects demonstrated with the abstract categories used in the experiments reported here were not implicated in the inversion effects found with other classes of stimuli, whilst conceding that the analogy is not complete, particularly in the case of faces. ©1997 The Experimental Psychology Society.

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McLaren, I. P. L. (1997). Categorization and perceptual learning: An analogue of the face inversion effect. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A: Human Experimental Psychology, 50(2), 257–273. https://doi.org/10.1080/713755705

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