Overestimation of eye size: People see themselves with bigger eyes in a holistic approach

A face contains crucial information for identification; moreover, face recognition is superior to other types of recognition. Notably, one's own face is recognized better than other familiar faces. However, it is unclear whether one's own face, especially one's own internal facial fea...

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Main Authors: Kyoko Hine, Hikaru Okubo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-10-01
Series:Acta Psychologica
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0001691821001694
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spelling doaj-538c0e166c114bc9acb179c7e4acf67f2021-09-19T04:52:22ZengElsevierActa Psychologica0001-69182021-10-01220103419Overestimation of eye size: People see themselves with bigger eyes in a holistic approachKyoko Hine0Hikaru Okubo1Toyohashi University of Technology, Toyohashi, Aichi, Japan; Corresponding author at: Hibarigaoka, Tempaku-cho, Toyohashi, Aichi, Japan.Department of Information Environment, Tokyo Denki University, Adachi-ku, Tokyo, JapanA face contains crucial information for identification; moreover, face recognition is superior to other types of recognition. Notably, one's own face is recognized better than other familiar faces. However, it is unclear whether one's own face, especially one's own internal facial features, is represented more accurately than other faces. Here, we investigated how one's own internal facial features were represented. We conducted a psychological experiment in which the participants were required to adjust eye size to the real size in photos of their own or well-known celebrities' faces. To investigate why individuals' own and celebrity facial representations were different, two types of photos were prepared, with and without external features. It was found that the accuracy of eye size for one's own face was better than that for celebrities' faces in the condition without external features, in which holistic processing was less involved than in the condition with external features. This implies that the eye size of one's own face was represented more accurately than that of other familiar faces when external features were removed. Moreover, the accuracy of the eye size of one's own face in the condition with external features was worse than that in the condition without external features; the adjusted eye size in the condition with external features was larger than that in the condition without external features. In contrast, for celebrities' faces, there was no significant difference between the conditions with and without external features. The adjusted eye sizes in all conditions were overestimated compared to real eye sizes. Previous research indicated that eye size was adjusted to a larger size when evaluating as more attractive, in which the evaluation is related to holistic processing. Based on this perspective, it could be that one's own face was represented as more attractive in the condition with external features in the current study. Taken together, the results indicated that the representation of own eye size, which is an internal facial feature, was affected by the visibility of the external features.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0001691821001694Own face representationEye sizeExternal featureHolistic processingAttractiveness
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kyoko Hine
Hikaru Okubo
spellingShingle Kyoko Hine
Hikaru Okubo
Overestimation of eye size: People see themselves with bigger eyes in a holistic approach
Acta Psychologica
Own face representation
Eye size
External feature
Holistic processing
Attractiveness
author_facet Kyoko Hine
Hikaru Okubo
author_sort Kyoko Hine
title Overestimation of eye size: People see themselves with bigger eyes in a holistic approach
title_short Overestimation of eye size: People see themselves with bigger eyes in a holistic approach
title_full Overestimation of eye size: People see themselves with bigger eyes in a holistic approach
title_fullStr Overestimation of eye size: People see themselves with bigger eyes in a holistic approach
title_full_unstemmed Overestimation of eye size: People see themselves with bigger eyes in a holistic approach
title_sort overestimation of eye size: people see themselves with bigger eyes in a holistic approach
publisher Elsevier
series Acta Psychologica
issn 0001-6918
publishDate 2021-10-01
description A face contains crucial information for identification; moreover, face recognition is superior to other types of recognition. Notably, one's own face is recognized better than other familiar faces. However, it is unclear whether one's own face, especially one's own internal facial features, is represented more accurately than other faces. Here, we investigated how one's own internal facial features were represented. We conducted a psychological experiment in which the participants were required to adjust eye size to the real size in photos of their own or well-known celebrities' faces. To investigate why individuals' own and celebrity facial representations were different, two types of photos were prepared, with and without external features. It was found that the accuracy of eye size for one's own face was better than that for celebrities' faces in the condition without external features, in which holistic processing was less involved than in the condition with external features. This implies that the eye size of one's own face was represented more accurately than that of other familiar faces when external features were removed. Moreover, the accuracy of the eye size of one's own face in the condition with external features was worse than that in the condition without external features; the adjusted eye size in the condition with external features was larger than that in the condition without external features. In contrast, for celebrities' faces, there was no significant difference between the conditions with and without external features. The adjusted eye sizes in all conditions were overestimated compared to real eye sizes. Previous research indicated that eye size was adjusted to a larger size when evaluating as more attractive, in which the evaluation is related to holistic processing. Based on this perspective, it could be that one's own face was represented as more attractive in the condition with external features in the current study. Taken together, the results indicated that the representation of own eye size, which is an internal facial feature, was affected by the visibility of the external features.
topic Own face representation
Eye size
External feature
Holistic processing
Attractiveness
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0001691821001694
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