Abstract

Face recognition ability is highly variable among neurologically intact populations. Across three experiments, this study examined for the first time associations between individual differences in a range of adaptive versus maladaptive emotion regulation strategies and face recognition. Using an immediate face-memory paradigm, in which observers had to identify a self-paced learned unfamiliar face from a 10-face target-present/ target-absent line-up, Experiment 1 (N = 42) found high levels of expressive suppression (the ongoing efforts to inhibit emotion-expressive behaviors), but not cognitive reappraisal (the cognitive re-evaluation of emotional events to change their emotional consequences), were associated with a lower level of overall face-memory accuracy and higher rates of misidentifications and false positives. Experiment 2 (N = 53) replicated these finding using a range of face-matching tasks, where observers were asked to match pairs of same-race or different-race face images taken on the same day or during different times. Once again, high levels of expressive suppression were associated with a lower level of overall face-matching performance and higher rates of false positives, but cognitive reappraisal did not correlate with any face-matching measure. Finally, Experiment 3 (N = 52) revealed that the higher use of maladaptive cognitive emotion regulation strategies, especially catastrophizing, was associated with lower levels of overall face-matching performances and higher rates of false positives. All told, the current research provides new evidence concerning the important associations between emotion and cognition.

Highlights

  • Face recognition ability is highly variable among neurologically intact populations [e.g., for reviews see 1–3]

  • For the Emotion Regulation Questionnaire (ERQ), we report the averages of individuals’ responses on the items measuring cognitive reappraisal and expressive suppression

  • Consistent with previous experiments [72], overall performance on the face immediate memory task was rather low (62%), but there were wide individual differences ranging from 30% to 100%

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Summary

Introduction

Face recognition ability is highly variable among neurologically intact populations [e.g., for reviews see 1–3]. Individuals with developmental prosopagnosia have severe face recognition deficits in the absence of any brain damages [for reviews, see 4, 5]. Individuals with extra-ordinary face recognition ability, oftentimes called superrecognizers, are able to perform rather challenging face recognition tasks with extremely high levels of accuracy [e.g., for reviews see 6, 7]. Between these two extremes, face recognition ability of the vast majority of neurologically intact individuals is distributed along this spectrum. Across a set of studies involving a total of 400 participants, Woodhead and Baddeley (1981) noticed that d’, the sensitivity index in the signal detection theory, ranges from 0.5 to 6.8 using

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