Behaviourist And Cognitive Approach To Learning and Phobias

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How helpful is Bruce & Young’s (1986) theory of face recognition in explaining the everyday experience of remembering faces and forgetting the names of people that we know?

In this essay I will be discussing face perception and in particular Bruce and Young’s (1986) theory on face recognition. I will discuss their theories of recognizing people’s faces and forgetting the names of people who we know. I will discuss how helpful their theories are in understanding face perception.

Face recognition allows us to perform the highly adaptive task of identifying individuals and picking up information from their expressions. This is an important social function as it allows us to identify people in our society, create relationships with these people and also be able to non verbally communicate how we feel through facial expressions and gestures. (Bruce 1994 cited by Martin, G.N.(Ed.) et al., 2010, p. 222)

Identifying a face involves a number of stages, including recognising the face as familiar, working out where we have seen it before and putting a name to it. Failure at one stage causes particular problems in the process of identification.

Bruce and Young’s (1986) came up with a cognitive model which describes face perception. This model shows how Bruce and Young’s theory splits face recognition into different functions. The first stage of their theory describes how the face is encoded using descriptions. These descriptions are then analysed independently for facial expressions and then information about their age, gender and race.  Feature information enables us to make familiarity judgements on the basis of the physical features of faces which lead to the next stage of the model.

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In the second stage of the model it shows how if the features analysed in the first stage are familiar, the Face Recognition Units (FRU) is activated. The FRU matches the visual description of the seen face against stored descriptions of the appearance of familiar faces seen before.

The final stage involves the retrieval of the person’s name, which is stored in long term memory along with biographical details such as personality and occupation. Familiar faces activate this information by using the Person Identity Node (PIN).This information can also be accessed through the personal identity node by other ...

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