Abstract

Several studies have provided evidence in favour of a norm-based representation of faces in memory. However, such models have hitherto failed to take account of how other person-relevant information affects face recognition performance. Here we investigated whether distinctive or typical auditory stimuli affect the subsequent recognition of previously unfamiliar faces and whether the type of auditory stimulus matters. In this study participants learned to associate either unfamiliar distinctive and typical voices or unfamiliar distinctive and typical sounds to unfamiliar faces. The results indicated that recognition performance was better to faces previously paired with distinctive than with typical voices but we failed to find any benefit on face recognition when the faces were previously associated with distinctive sounds. These findings possibly point to an expertise effect, as faces are usually associated to voices. More importantly, it suggests that the memory for visual faces can be modified by the perceptual quality of related vocal information and more specifically that facial distinctiveness can be of a multi-sensory nature. These results have important implications for our understanding of the structure of memory for person identification.

Highlights

  • In the domain of face recognition research, numerous studies have identified circumstances under which recognition or identification of faces is enhanced

  • We were interested in comparing recognition performance between old faces that were previously associated with distinctive voices and old faces that were previously associated with typical voices

  • We found that the previous association of a face with a distinctive voice during learning resulted in more accurate recognition of that face relative to a face that was previously associated with a typical voice

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Summary

Introduction

In the domain of face recognition research, numerous studies have identified circumstances under which recognition or identification of faces is enhanced. A useful framework that can account for the distinctiveness effect in faces has been proposed by Valentine (Valentine, 1991) and is known as the ‘face space’ model of memory for faces. The more distant a face is from the centre, the more distinctive it is and the more distant two faces are from each other in face space, the more they differ from each other and the easier it is to distinguish between them

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