Sex differences and the own-gender bias in face recognition: A meta-analytic review 论文

2013Visual Cognition引用 337
Face Recognition and PerceptionFace recognition and analysisEvolutionary Psychology and Human Behavior

详细信息

发表期刊/会议
Visual Cognition
发表日期
2013-09-01
发表年份
2013

关键词

Face Recognition and PerceptionFace recognition and analysisEvolutionary Psychology and Human Behavior

摘要

We review the literature on sex differences and the own-gender bias in face recognition. By means of a meta-analysis, we found that girls and women remember more faces than boys and men do (g=0.36), and more female faces (g=0.55), but not more male faces (g=0.08); however, when only male faces are presented, girls and women outperform boys and men (g=0.22). In addition, there is female own-gender bias (g=0.57), but not a male own-gender bias (g= − 0.03), showing that girls and women remember more female than male faces. It is argued that girls and women have an advantage in face processing and episodic memory, resulting in sex differences for faces, and that the female own-gender bias may stem from an early perceptual expertise for female faces, which may be strengthened by reciprocal interactions and psychological processes directing girls' and women's interest to other females.