Editorial: Face Recognition Difficulties in Children: Hits and/or Correct Rejections?
Abstract
Face recognition difficulties during childhood are well-documented.
However, mixed results were obtained regarding the precise nature of
these difficulties using different experimental tasks. Using recognition
memory paradigm (learning a set of faces followed by an old/new
recognition test using the previously studies faces mixed with an equal
set of distractors, children under the age of ten were found to have
lower rates of hits (the correct identification of previously-seen faces)
and correct rejections (the rejection of previously-unseen faces) than
older individuals. In contrast, using the eyewitness identification
methodology (seeing a target person through a video or live staged
crime followed by an identification test using two target-present and
target-absent lineups, children over five years of age were found to
produce a hit rate that is comparable to adults but older children still
produce lower correct rejections .
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