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Morality extracted under crowding impairs face identification.

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Facial morality perception is possible even in crowded visual conditions. Morality is preferentially extracted from faces, but this can impair facial identity discrimination.

Keywords:
crowdingmoralityvisual awareness

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Social Psychology
  • Neuroscience

Background:

  • Facial perception is crucial for social interaction.
  • Understanding how moral judgments are formed from faces is important.
  • Visual crowding can limit conscious access to facial information.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate if facial morality is perceptible under visual crowding.
  • To determine if moral information is preferentially processed.
  • To examine the impact of moral perception on facial identity discrimination.

Main Methods:

  • Participants learned faces associated with moral or neutral acts.
  • Faces were presented in peripheral vision with or without flankers (visual crowding).
  • Judgments of gender, morality, and face selection were recorded.

Main Results:

  • Moral faces were judged more accurately than neutral faces under crowding.
  • Preferential extraction of morality occurred even with limited conscious access.
  • Processing morality under crowding impaired facial identity discrimination.

Conclusions:

  • Facial morality can be perceived even in degraded visual conditions.
  • Moral information is prioritized during face perception.
  • Moral processing can interfere with recognizing specific individuals.