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Perceptual Expertise as a Shift From Strategic Interference to Automatic Holistic Processing

Authors :
Yetta Kwailing Wong
Jennifer J. Richler
Isabel Gauthier
Source :
Current Directions in Psychological Science. 20:129-134
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2011.

Abstract

Holistic processing was initially characterized a unique hallmark of face perception (e.g., Young et al., 1987) and later argued a domain-general marker of perceptual expertise (e.g., Gauthier et al., 1998). More recently, evidence for holistic processing - measured by interference from task-irrelevant parts - was obtained in novices, raising questions for its usefulness as a test of expertise. Indeed, recent studies use the same task to make opposite claims: Hsiao & Cottrell (2009) found more interference in novices than experts for Chinese characters, while Wong, Palmeri & Gauthier (2009) found more interference in experts than novices with objects. Offering a resolution to this paradox, our work on the perception of musical notation (Wong & Gauthier, in press) suggests that expert and novice interference effects represent two ends of a continuum: interference is initially strategic and contextual, but becomes more automatic as holistic processing develops with the acquisition of perceptual expertise.

Details

ISSN :
14678721 and 09637214
Volume :
20
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Current Directions in Psychological Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6c3b7b2b7c6a050999c69a45988c6548
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/0963721411402472