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The science behind people who never forget a face

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Lachlan Gilbert
Lachlan Gilbert,

Teaching AI to see faces like humans reveals what makes expert eyes so effective, new research shows.

What is it that makes a super recogniser 鈥 someone with extraordinary face recognition abilities 鈥 better at remembering faces than the rest of us?

According to new research carried out by cognitive scientists at 91色情片 Sydney, it鈥檚 not how much of a face they can take in 鈥 it comes down to the quality of the information their eyes focus on.

鈥淪uper-recognisers don鈥檛 just look harder, they look smarter. They choose the most useful parts of a face to take in,鈥 says Dr James Dunn, lead author on the research that published today in the journal .

鈥淭hey鈥檙e not actually seeing more, instead, their eyes naturally look at the parts of a face that carry the best clues for telling one person from another.鈥

Electronic eye

To find out what it is that super recognisers do differently when looking at a face, the researchers used eye tracking technology to measure where and for how long 37 super recognisers looked when examining photos of faces on a computer screen, and how that compared to 68 people with average facial recognition abilities.

With the tracking software, they then recreated what people in both groups had looked at, and fed the information into nine different neural networks already trained to recognise faces. These AI networks were then given the same task as the human participants 鈥 to decide whether two faces belonged to the same person.

鈥淎I has become highly adept at face recognition - Our goal was to exploit this to understand which human eye patterns were the most informative,鈥 Dr Dunn says.

When the researchers compared the performance of the AI in matching faces based on super recognisers鈥 eye tracking patterns and that of average recognisers, they found a clear difference. Even when the total amount of information was the same, AI fed with super-recogniser data was more accurate at matching faces than AI fed with average recognisers data.

Our previous research shows super-recognisers make more fixations and explore faces more broadly. Even when you control for the fact that they鈥檝e looked at more parts of the face, it turns out what they are looking at is also more valuable for identifying people.鈥

Their skill isn鈥檛 something you can learn like a trick. It鈥檚 an automatic, dynamic way of picking up what makes each face unique.
Dr James Dunn

Not just a party trick

So can people with average face recognition abilities learn from super recognisers to never forget a face? Sadly no, says Dr Dunn, there鈥檚 something else going on in the brain in processing the information 鈥 it鈥檚 not just about where and what to look at.

鈥淭heir skill isn鈥檛 something you can learn like a trick,鈥 says Dr Dunn. 鈥淚t鈥檚 an automatic, dynamic way of picking up what makes each face unique.

鈥淚t鈥檚 like caricature 鈥 the idea that when you exaggerate the distinctive features of a face, it actually becomes easier to recognise. Super-recognisers seem to do that visually 鈥 they鈥檙e tuning in to the features that are most diagnostic about a person鈥檚 face.鈥

Humans vs machines

When AI is used in the real world for facial recognition 鈥 for example, the eGates system at the airport 鈥 its processors look at us digitally and examine every pixel simultaneously, rather than looking at only parts of the face like humans do.

鈥淚n very controlled situations like eGates at the airport, where you鈥檝e got stable lighting, fixed distances and high-quality images matched to standardised photos, AI will exceed what any human can do,鈥 Dr Dunn says.

鈥淩ight now, when the conditions are less ideal, humans can still have an advantage 鈥 especially with people we know well 鈥 because we bring context and familiarity to the task. But that gap is narrowing as AI evolves.鈥

Implications

The researchers say the study offers insights into human visual expertise and could inspire improvements in facial recognition technology.

鈥淚t shows face recognition skill isn鈥檛 just about what happens in the brain later, it starts with how we look. The way we explore a face shapes what we learn about it,鈥 says Dr Dunn.

* Find out if you are a super-recogniser using the 鈥 a free online challenging test that is built to identify this rare ability.

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Lachlan Gilbert
罢别濒:听+61 2 9065 5241
Email: lachlan.gilbert@unsw.edu.au