par De Heering, Adélaïde
Référence Ecological psychology, 26, 1-2, page (16-29)
Publication Publié, 2014
Article révisé par les pairs
Résumé : Children take many years to become as skilled as adults in differentiating among faces and there is debate about the role of face experience in improving their skills. Here we tested whether the increase in exposure to the faces of children associated with entering school leads to improved face discrimination for this face category. To do so, we compared the face discrimination abilities of 3- to 4-year-old children who began attending school for the first time with those of age-matched controls not yet in school. Both groups completed a 2-alternative forced-choice matching task with adult and child faces, presented both in an upright and inverted orientation, at Time 1 (within the first month of entering school for the school group) and at Time 2 (5 months later). Between Time 1 and Time 2, both groups improved in discriminating between adult faces, but only the preschoolers improved for child faces. These effects were not modulated by inversion. Overall, these results suggest that, during the preschool years, a natural increase in exposure to the faces of 1 face category leads to improved discrimination of novel exemplars of this face category. © Taylor & Francis.