4.1 Article

Perceptual factors affecting the ability to assess facial resemblance between parents and newborns in humans

Journal

PERCEPTION
Volume 39, Issue 6, Pages 807-818

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1068/p6372

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Funding

  1. French CNRS
  2. French National Research Agency (ANR)

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People undeniably pay attention to faces, and facial resemblance may act as a kinship cue. However, previous studies have shown that the ability to detect kinship through facial resemblance is limited, and it has been suggested that this may be due to several types of perceptual factors. To further understand the processes that underpin kinship judgment, it is important to investigate which perceptual factors predict the probability of parent child pairs being detected as related. To this end, we performed two experiments. In the first, we evaluated the ability of human observers to match newborns with one of their parents. In the second, we explored three perceptual factors that may have influenced kinship detection (gender discrimination, facial attractiveness, and perceptual similarity). Results showed that the participants were able to match newborns with one of their parents, even though the task was perceived as difficult. Moreover, our study goes further than previous findings, showing that the perceptual factors investigated may significantly contribute to kinship detection.

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