The Effect of Inversion on the Encoding of Normal and “Thatcherized” Faces
Open Access
- 1 August 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A
- Vol. 56 (6) , 955-975
- https://doi.org/10.1080/02724980244000774
Abstract
In the “Thatcher illusion” a face, in which the eyes and mouth are inverted relative to the rest of the face, looks grotesque when shown upright but not when inverted. In four experiments we investigated the contribution of local and global processing to this illusion in normal observers. We examined inversion effects (i.e., better performance for upright than for inverted faces) in a task requiring discrimination of whether faces were or were not “thatcherized”. Observers made same/different judgements to isolated face parts (Experiments 1–2) and to whole faces (Experiments 3–4). Face pairs had the same or different identity, allowing for different processing strategies using feature-based or configural information, respectively. In Experiment 1, feature-based matching of same-person face parts yielded only a small inversion effect for normal face parts. However, when feature-based matching was prevented by using the face parts of different people on all trials (Experiment 2) an inversion effect occurred for normal but not for thatcherized parts. In Experiments 3 and 4, inversion effects occurred with normal but not with thatcherized whole faces, on both same- and different-person matching tasks. This suggests that a common configural strategy was used with whole (normal) faces. Face context facilitated attention to misoriented parts in same-person but not in different-person matching. The results indicate that (1) face inversion disrupts local configural processing, but not the processing of image features, and (2) thatcherization disrupts local configural processing in upright faces.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- What's lost in inverted faces?Cognition, 1993
- Inversion and Configuration of FacesCognitive Psychology, 1993
- Second-order relational properties and the inversion effect: Testing a theory of face perceptionPerception & Psychophysics, 1991
- On Thompson's Inverted-Face Phenomenon (Research Note)Perception, 1988
- Upside‐down faces: A review of the effect of inversion upon face recognitionBritish Journal of Psychology, 1988
- Looking at Faces: First-Order and Second-Order Features as Determinants of Facial AppearancePerception, 1988
- Configurational Information in Face PerceptionPerception, 1987
- Thatcher and the Cheshire Cat: Context and the Processing of Facial FeaturesPerception, 1985
- Margaret Thatcher: A New IllusionPerception, 1980
- Looking at upside-down faces.Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1969