Latest SR Research - Mask Wearing Suspects

New research by Professor Josh Davis and others has been conducted into the effect of subjects wearing masks and sunglasses on image matching. Once again, this demonstrates the importance of HUMAN Super Recognisers to law enforcement and security.

The effect of face masks and sunglasses on identity and expression recognition with super-recognizers and typical observers | Royal Society Open Science (royalsocietypublishing.org)

The abstract is below:

Face masks present a new challenge to face identification (here matching) and emotion recognition in Western cultures. Here, we present the results of three experiments that test the effect of masks, and also the effect of sunglasses (an occlusion that individuals tend to have more experienced with) on (i) familiar face matching, (ii) unfamiliar face matching and (iii) emotion categorization. Occlusion reduced accuracy in all three tasks, with most errors in the mask condition; however, there was little difference in performance for faces in masks compared with faces in sunglasses. Super-recognizers, people who are highly skilled at matching unconcealed faces, were impaired by occlusion, but at the group level, performed with higher accuracy than controls on all tasks. Results inform psychology theory with implications for everyday interactions, security and policing in a mask-wearing society.