Reliability and Validity of the Other Race Effect: Comparison of Two Measures

The other race effect (ORE) is the phenomenon where people better recognise faces of their own race, as opposed to faces of other less familiar races. In this study the reliability and validity of the ORE was examined with two different measures of face perception. A total of 52 participants complet...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Guðbjörn Lárus Guðmundsson 1988-
Other Authors: Háskóli Íslands
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1946/28068
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spelling ftskemman:oai:skemman.is:1946/28068 2023-05-15T17:53:52+02:00 Reliability and Validity of the Other Race Effect: Comparison of Two Measures Áreiðanleiki og réttmæti upprunahrifa: Samanburður tveggja mælitækja Guðbjörn Lárus Guðmundsson 1988- Háskóli Íslands 2017-06 application/pdf image/jpeg http://hdl.handle.net/1946/28068 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/1946/28068 Sálfræði Sjónskynjun Hugarstarf Thesis 2017 ftskemman 2022-12-11T06:56:17Z The other race effect (ORE) is the phenomenon where people better recognise faces of their own race, as opposed to faces of other less familiar races. In this study the reliability and validity of the ORE was examined with two different measures of face perception. A total of 52 participants completed both measures, 28 of whom had previously been diagnosed as dyslexic. The two measures were the Cambridge Face Memory Test – Caucasian Asian (CFMT-CA), based on the Cambridge Face Memory Test, and the Other Race Caucasian Asian (ORCA), a task specifically designed for this study. Both tasks used a forced-choice paradigm to measure face recognition for Asian and European faces. The ORE measurement is the difference in performance on Asian vs. European faces. The results showed that both tasks were reliable measurements of face perception, but only CFMT-CA measured the ORE reliably. Validity of the tasks was also assessed with a measure of interracial contact and only the CFMT-CA correlated with interracial contact. This study illustrates the importance of having a reliable measurement of the ORE itself rather than just of face recognition. It also highlights the possible dangers of using unknown and untested tasks and stimuli to measure the ORE. Thesis Orca Skemman (Iceland)
institution Open Polar
collection Skemman (Iceland)
op_collection_id ftskemman
language English
topic Sálfræði
Sjónskynjun
Hugarstarf
spellingShingle Sálfræði
Sjónskynjun
Hugarstarf
Guðbjörn Lárus Guðmundsson 1988-
Reliability and Validity of the Other Race Effect: Comparison of Two Measures
topic_facet Sálfræði
Sjónskynjun
Hugarstarf
description The other race effect (ORE) is the phenomenon where people better recognise faces of their own race, as opposed to faces of other less familiar races. In this study the reliability and validity of the ORE was examined with two different measures of face perception. A total of 52 participants completed both measures, 28 of whom had previously been diagnosed as dyslexic. The two measures were the Cambridge Face Memory Test – Caucasian Asian (CFMT-CA), based on the Cambridge Face Memory Test, and the Other Race Caucasian Asian (ORCA), a task specifically designed for this study. Both tasks used a forced-choice paradigm to measure face recognition for Asian and European faces. The ORE measurement is the difference in performance on Asian vs. European faces. The results showed that both tasks were reliable measurements of face perception, but only CFMT-CA measured the ORE reliably. Validity of the tasks was also assessed with a measure of interracial contact and only the CFMT-CA correlated with interracial contact. This study illustrates the importance of having a reliable measurement of the ORE itself rather than just of face recognition. It also highlights the possible dangers of using unknown and untested tasks and stimuli to measure the ORE.
author2 Háskóli Íslands
format Thesis
author Guðbjörn Lárus Guðmundsson 1988-
author_facet Guðbjörn Lárus Guðmundsson 1988-
author_sort Guðbjörn Lárus Guðmundsson 1988-
title Reliability and Validity of the Other Race Effect: Comparison of Two Measures
title_short Reliability and Validity of the Other Race Effect: Comparison of Two Measures
title_full Reliability and Validity of the Other Race Effect: Comparison of Two Measures
title_fullStr Reliability and Validity of the Other Race Effect: Comparison of Two Measures
title_full_unstemmed Reliability and Validity of the Other Race Effect: Comparison of Two Measures
title_sort reliability and validity of the other race effect: comparison of two measures
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/1946/28068
genre Orca
genre_facet Orca
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1946/28068
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