Riedmann F, Egger B, Rohe T (2024)
Publication Language: English
Publication Type: Conference contribution, Original article
Publication year: 2024
URI: https://2024.ccneuro.org/pdf/154_Paper_authored_CCN2024_MaskedFaces-Authored.pdf
Open Access Link: https://2024.ccneuro.org/pdf/154_Paper_authored_CCN2024_MaskedFaces-Authored.pdf
Previous studies have shown that faces are rated as more
attractive when they are partially occluded. The cause of
this observation remains unclear. One explanation is a
mental reconstruction of the occluded face parts which
is biased towards a more attractive percept as shown in
face-attractiveness rating tasks. We aimed to test for this
hypothesis by using a delayed matching-to-sample task,
which directly requires mental reconstruction. In two on-
line experiments, we presented observers with unattrac-
tive, neutral or attractive synthetic reconstructions of
the occluded face parts using a state-of-the-art diffusion-
based image generator. Our experiments do not support
the initial hypothesis and reveal an unattractiveness bias
for occluded faces instead. This suggests that facial at-
tractiveness rating tasks do not prompt reconstructions.
Rather, the attractivity bias may arise from global image
features, and faces may actually be reconstructed with
unattractive properties when mental reconstruction is ap-
plied.
APA:
Riedmann, F., Egger, B., & Rohe, T. (2024). Revealing an Unattractivity Bias in Mental Reconstruction of Occluded Faces using Generative Image Models. In Proceedings of the Cognitive Computational Neuroscience. Boston, US.
MLA:
Riedmann, Frederik, Bernhard Egger, and Tim Rohe. "Revealing an Unattractivity Bias in Mental Reconstruction of Occluded Faces using Generative Image Models." Proceedings of the Cognitive Computational Neuroscience, Boston 2024.
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