Open Access Repository

Similarity effects on recognition : testing the diagnostic feature-detection hypothesis

Newton, EK 2019 , 'Similarity effects on recognition : testing the diagnostic feature-detection hypothesis', Honours thesis, University of Tasmania.

[img]
Preview
PDF (Whole thesis)
Newton_whole_th...pdf | Download (2MB)

| Preview

Abstract

Diagnostic feature-detection (DFD) hypothesis proposes that the simultaneous presentation of faces (e.g., in police lineups) enhances identification accuracy by allowing shared features to be discounted and diagnostic features to be detected. However, no direct tests of this theory have been conducted in face recognition tasks. We directly tested the DFD hypothesis. 60 participants (42 women; aged 18 to 45 years) completed a facial recognition task. Memory for faces was tested in three task conditions: a yes/no (Y/N) task, in which one face was presented at a time; a two alternative forced choice (2AFC) task, in which participants had to choose one of two faces, presented simultaneously; a two alternative open choice (2AOC) task, in which two faces were presented simultaneously, with a ‘not present’ option. Difficulty was manipulated through two levels of target-lure similarity (high, low). Discrimination (d’) was calculated and compared between the high and low similarity trials within each condition. Contrary to the predictions of DFD, we found significant differences in discrimination between high and low similarity trials in the 2AFC and 2AOC conditions. Unexpectedly, the manipulation of difficulty did not affect performance in the Y/N condition. We found no support for the DFD hypothesis.

Item Type: Thesis - Honours
Authors/Creators:Newton, EK
Keywords: facial recognition, eyewitness, lineup, compound decisions, diagnostic feature detection, similarity
Copyright Information:

Copyright 2019 the author

Item Statistics: View statistics for this item

Actions (login required)

Item Control Page Item Control Page
TOP