Volume 88, Issue 1 p. 143-156

Intra- and inter-modal repetition priming of familiar faces and voices

Hadyn D. Ellis

Corresponding Author

Hadyn D. Ellis

School of Psychology, University of Wales Cardiff, Cardiff, CF1 3YG, UK

School of Psychology, University of Wales Cardiff, Cardiff, CF1 3YG, UKSearch for more papers by this author
Dylan M. Jones

Dylan M. Jones

School of Psychology, University of Wales Cardiff, Cardiff, CF1 3YG, UK

Search for more papers by this author
Nick Mosdell

Nick Mosdell

School of Psychology, University of Wales Cardiff, Cardiff, CF1 3YG, UK

Search for more papers by this author
First published: 13 April 2011
Citations: 115

Abstract

Two experiments explored repetition priming for familiar voices and faces. Expt 1 revealed that, like faces, prior exposure to a voice in a gender judgment task speeds its subsequent classification as familiar or unfamiliar, some minutes later. Faces and voices do not prime one another, however; a result consistent with the notion that evidence is initially accumulated separately for voices and faces. In Expt 2, a prediction derived from the IAC model of Burton, Bruce & Johnston (1990) was explored. The results confirmed that inter-modal repetition priming occurs when the interval between exposures to different personal identification stimuli are separated by a short SOA. This result is consistent with similar ones reported by Calder (1993) and Young, Flude, Hellawell & Ellis (1994) for face-name combinations.