User:Cecethack/sandbox

User:Cecethack/Evaluate an Article

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Gen%20Wood/Availability_heuristic/Cecethack_Peer_Review?preload=Template%3ADashboard.wikiedu.org_peer_review

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:VictoriaNorth91/Effects_of_stress_on_memory/Cecethack_Peer_Review?preload=Template%3ADashboard.wikiedu.org_peer_review

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Paytdaddy/Processing_fluency/Cecethack_Peer_Review?preload=Template%3ADashboard.wikiedu.org_peer_review

Face advantage in memory recall[edit]
During face perception, neural networks make connections with the brain to recall memories. According to the Seminal Model of face perception, there are three stages of face processing including recognition of the face, the recall of memories and information that are linked with that face, and finally name recall. There are, however, exceptions to this order. For example, names are recalled faster than semantic information in cases of highly familiar stimuli. While the face is powerful identifier of individuals, the voice also helps in the recognition of people and is an identifier for important information.

Research has been conducted to see if faces or voices make it easier to identify individuals and recall semantic memory and episodic memory. These experiments look at all three stages of face processing. The experiment method was to show two groups celebrity and familiar faces or voices with a between-group design and ask the participants to recall information about them. The participants are first asked if the stimulus is familiar. If they answer yes then they are asked to information (semantic memory) and memories they have of the person (episodic memory) that fits the face or voice presented. These experiments all demonstrate the strong phenomenon of the face advantage and how it persists through different follow-up studies with different experimental controls and variables.