The Influence of Self-Resembling Cues in the Cross-Race Memory Effect

Mia Elizabeth Caputo

Current memory theory suggests that people should have better memory for faces that look dissimilar from the average face that is encountered in daily life. However, people have better memory for same-race faces and interaction with other-race faces only minutely reduces this effect. This research aims to understand the contention between these two theories and we hypothesize that this lies with the similarity of faces —not to the average face— but to one’s own image

Major: 
Psychology
Exhibition Category: 
Social and Behavioral Sciences
Exhibition Format: 
Poster Presentation
Campus: 
University Park
Faculty Sponsor: 
Reginald Adams
Location: 
Heritage Hall, HUB-Robeson Center
Poster Number: 
338