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If Barack Obama had taken his mother's surname and kept his childhood nickname, American voters might literally see "Barry Dunham" as a quite different presidential candidate, a new study suggests. A name significantly changes our perception of someone's face and race, according to research in the journal, Perception.
Participants in the study - titled Barack Obama or Barry Dunham? - rated multi-racial faces with European names as looking significantly "more European" than exactly the same multi-racial faces when given Asian names. Earlier research had established that people tend to be better and more accurate at recognising faces of their own race than those of a different race, an effect called the own-race bias: colloquially, the feeling that people of a different race "all look the same to me".
This bias has far-reaching negative effects, most notably the observation that eyewitnesses to crimes are more likely to incorrectly identify a perpetrator of a different race. By gaining a betterunderstan
The study by researchers at the UNSW School of Psychology aimed to test the hypothesis that the presence of racially-sugges
In the experiment, 64 participants were asked to rate the appearance of Asian-Australia
The faces (see image) show examples of "morphed" faces used in the study: (a) a morphed Asian face with Asian name, (b) a morphed European face with European name, (c) a morphed multiracial face with Asian name and (d) a morphed multiracial face with European name.
Morphing the image of an Asian male with the image of a European male created the multiracial stimulus faces. Morphing together two Asian faces created the Asian stimulus faces, and morphing together two European faces created the European stimulus faces.
For each trial, after viewing the face and name for 3 seconds, participants rated the appearance of the face on a 9-point scale, where 1="very Asian-looking" and 9="very European-lookin

Images of faces used in the experiment
"The study reveals how socially derived expectations and stereotypes can influence face perception," says co-author and UNSW PhD student, Kirin Hilliar. "The result is consistent with other research findings suggesting that once people categorise a face into a racial group, they look for features consistent with that categorization.
For example, a 2001 study found that multiracial (half Hispanic, half African-America
hairstyles.
"The own-race bias is often revealed in people being relatively poor at encoding and recalling the facial characteristics of an unfamiliar racial group," according to Dr Richard Kemp, a face-recognitio
Ms Hilliar adds: "The next step in our research is to investigate whether these racially-sugges
Media contact: Dan Gaffney, UNSW - 0411 156 015