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Identification and ratings of caricatures: Implications for mental representations of faces

  • Stanford University
  • Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

353 Scopus citations

Abstract

S. Brennan (1985, Leonardo, 18, 170-178) has developed a computer-implemented caricature generator based on a holistic theory of caricature. A face is represented by 37 lines, based on a fixed set of 169 points. Caricatures are produced by exaggerating all metric differences between a face and a norm. Anticaricatures can be created by reducing all the differences between a face and a norm. Caricatures of familiar faces were identified more quickly than veridical line drawings, which were identified more quickly than anticaricatures. There was no difference in identification accuracy for the three types of representation. The best likeness was considered to be a caricature. We discuss the implications of these results for how faces are mentally represented. The results are consistent with a holistic theory of encoding in which distinctive aspects of a face are represented by comparison with a norm. We suggest that this theory may be appropriate for classes of visual stimuli, other than faces, whose members share a configuration definable by a fixed set of points.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)473-497
Number of pages25
JournalCognitive Psychology
Volume19
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 1987

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