Recognising Facial Surfaces
- 1 December 1991
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Perception
- Vol. 20 (6) , 755-769
- https://doi.org/10.1068/p200755
Abstract
The extent to which faces depicted as surfaces devoid of pigmentation and with minimal texture cues (‘head models’) could be matched with photographs (when unfamiliar) and identified (when familiar) was examined in three experiments. The head models were obtained by scanning the three-dimensional surface of the face with a laser, and by displaying the surface measured in this way by using standard computer-aided design techniques. Performance in all tasks was above chance but far from ceiling. Experiment 1 showed that matching of unfamiliar head models with photographs was affected by the resolution with which the surface was displayed, suggesting that subjects based their decisions, at least in part, on three-dimensional surface structure. Matching accuracy was also affected by other factors to do with the viewpoints shown in the head models and test photographs, and the type of lighting used to portray the head model. In experiment 2 further evidence for the importance of the nature of the illumination used was obtained, and it was found that the addition of a hairstyle (not that of the target face) did not facilitate matching. In experiment 3 identification of the head models by colleagues of the people shown was compared with identification of photographs where the hair was concealed and eyes were closed. Head models were identified less well than these photographs, suggesting that the difficulties in their recognition are not solely due to the lack of hair. Women's heads were disproportionately difficult to recognise from the head models. The results are discussed in terms of their implications for the use of such three-dimensional head models in forensic and surgical applications.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Perceptual categories and the computation of “grandmother”The European Journal of Cognitive Psychology, 1991
- Further experiments on the perception of growth in three dimensionsPerception & Psychophysics, 1989
- Identification of Two-Tone Images; Some Implications for High- and Low-Spatial-Frequency Processes in Human VisionPerception, 1988
- Looking at Faces: First-Order and Second-Order Features as Determinants of Facial AppearancePerception, 1988
- Recognition-by-components: A theory of human image understanding.Psychological Review, 1987
- The basis of the 3/4 view advantage in face recognitionApplied Cognitive Psychology, 1987
- Perceptual organization and the representation of natural formArtificial Intelligence, 1986
- Identification of Familiar and Unfamiliar Faces from Internal and External Features: Some Implications for Theories of Face RecognitionPerception, 1979
- Face recognition accuracy as a function of mode of representation.Journal of Applied Psychology, 1978
- Why are faces hard to recognize in photographic negative?Perception & Psychophysics, 1972