V. Bruce et S. Langton, THE USE OF PIGMENTATION AND SHADING INFORMATION IN RECOGNIZING THE SEX AND IDENTITIES OF FACES, Perception, 23(7), 1994, pp. 803-822
An investigation of what can be learned about representational process
es in face recognition from the independent and combined effects of in
verting and negating facial images is reported. In experiment 1, indep
endent effects of inversion and negation were observed in a task of id
entifying famous faces. In experiments 2 through 4 the question of whe
ther effects of negation were still obtained when effects due to the r
eversal of pigmentation in negative images were eliminated was examine
d. By the use of images of the 3-D surfaces of faces measured by laser
, and displays as smooth surfaces devoid of pigmentation, only effects
of inversion were obtained reliably, suggesting that the effects obse
rved in experiment 1 arose largely through the inversion of pigmentati
on values in normal images of faces. The results of experiment 5 sugge
sted that the difference was not due to the different task demands of
experiments 2-4 compared with those of experiment 1. When normally pig
mented face images were used in a task making similar demands to that
of experiment 4, independent effects of inversion and negation were ag
ain observed. When a task of sex classification was used in experiment
s 6 and 7, clear effects of negation as well as inversion were observe
d on latencies, though not accuracies, of responding. The results are
interpreted in terms of the information content of pigmentation relati
ve to shape from shading in different face-classification tasks. The r
esults also reinforce other recent evidence demonstrating the importan
ce of image intensity as well as spatial layout of face 'features'.