123
Views
41
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Original Articles

Age Effects in the Processing of Typical and Distinctive Faces

&
Pages 447-465 | Received 11 May 1994, Published online: 29 May 2007

Keep up to date with the latest research on this topic with citation updates for this article.

Read on this site (15)

Tim Valentine, Michael B. Lewis & Peter J. Hills. (2016) Face-space: A unifying concept in face recognition research. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 69:10, pages 1996-2019.
Read now
Lisa A. Parr, Jessica Taubert, Anthony C. Little & Peter J. B. Hancock. (2012) The organization of conspecific face space in nonhuman primates. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 65:12, pages 2411-2434.
Read now
Elinor McKone, Kate Crookes, Linda Jeffery & Daniel D. Dilks. (2012) A critical review of the development of face recognition: Experience is less important than previously believed. Cognitive Neuropsychology 29:1-2, pages 174-212.
Read now
MitchellM. Metzger. (2011) Directed Forgetting: Differential Effects on Typical and Distinctive Faces. The Journal of General Psychology 138:2, pages 155-168.
Read now
RobertA. Johnston & AndrewJ. Edmonds. (2009) Familiar and unfamiliar face recognition: A review. Memory 17:5, pages 577-596.
Read now
Kate Humphreys & MarkH. Johnson. (2007) The development of “face-space” in infancy. Visual Cognition 15:5, pages 578-598.
Read now
MitchellM. Metzger. (2006) Face Distinctiveness and Delayed Testing: Differential Effects on Performance and Confidence. The Journal of General Psychology 133:2, pages 209-216.
Read now
Anna Gilchrist & Elinor McKone. (2003) Early maturity of face processing in children: Local and relational distinctiveness effects in 7-year-olds. Visual Cognition 10:7, pages 769-793.
Read now
Michael B. Lewis. (1999) Are Caricatures Special? Evidence of Peak Shift in Face Recognition. European Journal of Cognitive Psychology 11:1, pages 105-117.
Read now
Michael B. Lewis Robert. (1999) A Unified Account of the Effects of Caricaturing Faces. Visual Cognition 6:1, pages 1-42.
Read now
A. Mike Burton & John R. Vokey. (1998) The Face-Space Typicality Paradox: Understanding the Face-Space Metaphor. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A 51:3, pages 475-483.
Read now
Michael B. Lewis. (1997) Familiarity, Target Set and False Positives in Face Recognition. European Journal of Cognitive Psychology 9:4, pages 437-459.
Read now
Robert A. Johnston, Masami Kanazawa, Takashi Kato & Masaomi Oda. (1997) Exploring the Structure of Multidimensional Face-space: The Effects of Age and Gender. Visual Cognition 4:1, pages 39-57.
Read now
R.A. Johnston, A.B. Milne, C. Williams & J. Hosie. (1997) Do Distinctive Faces Come from Outer Space? An Investigation of the Status of a Multidimensional Face-Space. Visual Cognition 4:1, pages 59-67.
Read now
Lesley C. Scanlan & Robert A. Johnston. (1997) I Recognize Your Face, But I Can't Remember Your Name: A Grown up Explanation. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A 50:1, pages 183-198.
Read now

Articles from other publishers (26)

Sarah Laurence & Catherine J. Mondloch. (2016) That’s my teacher! Children’s ability to recognize personally familiar and unfamiliar faces improves with age. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology 143, pages 123-138.
Crossref
Annemie Ploeger & Björn van der Hoort. (2015) Evolutionary Psychology as a Metatheory for the Social Sciences: How to Gather Interdisciplinary Evidence for a Psychological Adaptation. Review of General Psychology 19:3, pages 381-392.
Crossref
Samantha Bank, Gillian Rhodes, Ainsley Read & Linda Jeffery. (2015) Face and body recognition show similar improvement during childhood. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology 137, pages 1-11.
Crossref
Brenda M. Stoesz & Lorna S. Jakobson. (2014) Developmental changes in attention to faces and bodies in static and dynamic scenes. Frontiers in Psychology 5.
Crossref
Linda Jeffery, Ainsley Read & Gillian Rhodes. (2013) Four year-olds use norm-based coding for face identity. Cognition 127:2, pages 258-263.
Crossref
Linda Jeffery & Gillian Rhodes. (2011) Insights into the development of face recognition mechanisms revealed by face aftereffects. British Journal of Psychology 102:4, pages 799-815.
Crossref
James W. Tanaka, Tamara L. Meixner & Justin Kantner. (2010) Exploring the perceptual spaces of faces, cars and birds in children and adults. Developmental Science 14:4, pages 762-768.
Crossref
Peter J. Hills, Andrew M. Holland & Michael B. Lewis. (2010) Aftereffects for face attributes with different natural variability: Children are more adaptable than adolescents. Cognitive Development 25:3, pages 278-289.
Crossref
Mayu Nishimura, Jaime Doyle, Kate Humphreys & Marlene Behrmann. (2010) Probing the face-space of individuals with prosopagnosia. Neuropsychologia 48:6, pages 1828-1841.
Crossref
Mayu Nishimura, Daphne Maurer & Xiaoqing Gao. (2009) Exploring children’s face-space: A multidimensional scaling analysis of the mental representation of facial identity. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology 103:3, pages 355-375.
Crossref
Robert A Johnston, Eleanor Tomlinson, Chris Jones & Alan Weaden. (2009) Face Classification in Schizophrenia: Evidence for a Sensitivity to Distinctiveness. Perception 38:5, pages 702-707.
Crossref
Thomas F. Gross. (2007) Recognition of Immaturity and Emotional Expressions in Blended Faces by Children with Autism and Other Developmental Disabilities. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders 38:2, pages 297-311.
Crossref
Gillian Rhodes & Linda Jeffery. (2006) Adaptive norm-based coding of facial identity. Vision Research 46:18, pages 2977-2987.
Crossref
Kristina Murphy, Elinor McKone & Judith Slee. (2006) Absolute versus relative difference measures of priming: Which is appropriate when baseline scores change with age?. British Journal of Developmental Psychology 24:2, pages 293-304.
Crossref
Elinor McKone & Barbara L. Boyer. (2006) Sensitivity of 4-year-olds to featural and second-order relational changes in face distinctiveness. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology 94:2, pages 134-162.
Crossref
Angela M. Griffin & Judith H. Langlois. (2006) Stereotype Directionality and Attractiveness Stereotyping: Is Beauty Good or is Ugly Bad?. Social Cognition 24:2, pages 187-206.
Crossref
Rebecca A Hoss, Jennifer L Ramsey, Angela M Griffin & Judith H Langlois. (2016) The Role of Facial Attractiveness and Facial Masculinity/Femininity in Sex Classification of Faces. Perception 34:12, pages 1459-1474.
Crossref
Mitchell Metzger & K. Robert Bridges. (2004) Spectacles, Distinctiveness, and Face Recognition: A Web-Based Experiment. CyberPsychology & Behavior 7:1, pages 113-117.
Crossref
Kristina Murphy, Elinor McKone & Judith Slee. (2003) Dissociations between implicit and explicit memory in children: The role of strategic processing and the knowledge base. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology 84:2, pages 124-165.
Crossref
Michelle de Haan, Kate Humphreys & Mark H. Johnson. (2002) Developing a brain specialized for face perception: A converging methods approach. Developmental Psychobiology 40:3, pages 200-212.
Crossref
Paul P. W. Chang, Susan C. Levine & Philip J. Benson. (2002) Children's recognition of caricatures.. Developmental Psychology 38:6, pages 1038-1051.
Crossref
Alejo Freire & Kang Lee. (2001) Face Recognition in 4- to 7-Year-Olds: Processing of Configural, Featural, and Paraphernalia Information. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology 80:4, pages 347-371.
Crossref
Johanna Kissler & Karl-Heinz Bäuml. (2000) Effects of the beholder’s age on the perception of facial attractiveness. Acta Psychologica 104:2, pages 145-166.
Crossref
Gillian Rhodes, Susan Carey, Graham Byatt & Fiona Proffitt. (1998) Coding spatial variations in faces and simple shapes: a test of two models. Vision Research 38:15-16, pages 2307-2321.
Crossref
Graham Byatt & Gillian Rhodes. (1998) Recognition of own-race and other-race caricatures: implications for models of face recognition. Vision Research 38:15-16, pages 2455-2468.
Crossref
Gillian Rhodes, Graham Byatt, Tanya Tremewan & Anthony Kennedy. (2016) Facial Distinctiveness and the Power of Caricatures. Perception 26:2, pages 207-223.
Crossref

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.