
doi: 10.3758/bf03194708
pmid: 12049276
We investigated participants' ability to identify and represent faces by hand. In Experiment 1, participants proved surprisingly capable of identifying unfamiliar live human faces using only their sense of touch. To evaluate the contribution of geometric and material information more directly, we biased participants toward encoding faces more in terms of geometric than material properties, by varying the exploration condition. When participants explored the faces both visually and tactually, identification accuracy did not improve relative to touch alone. When participants explored masks of the faces, thereby eliminating material cues, matching accuracy declined substantially relative to tactual identification of live faces. In Experiment 2, we explored intersensory transfer of face information between vision and touch. The findings are discussed in terms of their relevance to haptic object processing and to the face-processing literature in general.
Adult, Male, Adolescent, Transfer, Psychology, Discrimination Learning, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Face, Mental Recall, Psychophysics, Humans, Female, Stereognosis, Sensory Deprivation, Perceptual Masking
Adult, Male, Adolescent, Transfer, Psychology, Discrimination Learning, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Face, Mental Recall, Psychophysics, Humans, Female, Stereognosis, Sensory Deprivation, Perceptual Masking
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