From global-to-local? Uncovering the temporal dynamics of the composite face illusion using distributional analyses

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Abstract

It is widely believed that faces are processed holistically such that their facial features or parts are represented as global wholes rather than independent entities. But how does their holistic representation evolve in time? According to the global-to-local hypothesis, the initial representation of faces is holistic and coarse at the outset but is becoming progressively detailed and analytic. The current study set to test this globalto-local hypothesis by applying fine-grained methods of response time analyses to the composite face illusion – a traditional marker of holistic face processing. The analyses included the delta plots and conditional accuracy functions. These tools move beyond the mean RT and accuracy to provide detailed analysis of the temporal dynamics of the composite face effect. The methodologies converged on the conclusion that the composite effect is minimal for fast RTs but becomes progressively larger as RT gets slower. This pattern is inconsistent with a global-to-local dynamics. The implications of these results to the study of face perception are discussed.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2331
JournalFrontiers in Psychology
Volume10
Issue numberOCT
DOIs
StatePublished - 2019

Keywords

  • Composite faces
  • Delta plots
  • Distributional analyses
  • Feature-based processing
  • Global-to-local
  • Holistic processing
  • Reaction time

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