When face recognition fails.

Abstract
Investigated, in 2 studies with a total of 98 female Ss, recognition of pictures of faces, focusing on the effects of changes in appearance of the face from presentation to test and type of processing or encoding. Results of Exp I demonstrate that (a) previously seen faces changed in pose and facial expression were discriminated from new faces essentially as well as pictures identical at presentation and test; (b) major changes in the appearance of a face (disguises) reduced recognition almost to the level of chance; and (c) Ss encoding faces in terms of personality characteristics showed better recognition performance than Ss whose processing was based on physical, facial features. Exp II expanded on result (b), utilizing photographs with systematic variations in pose and in the presence/absence of glasses, wig, and beard. The design required Ss to learn names for target faces and then to identify those targets in a series of test photographs. Results show that the manipulations of pose and disguising features produced effects on probability of identification that were orderly and dramatic in magnitude. It is concluded that simple changes in appearance can effectively interfere with recognition of faces. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2006 APA, all rights reserved)