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Gen Z Can't Remember Older Faces: It's Science!
18 Dec
Summary
- Younger adults recognize faces similar in age better.
- Older adults recognize younger and older faces equally.
- Lack of exposure, not bias, affects younger recognition.

New research from the University of Exeter explains why younger generations may find it harder to recall older faces. A study on the 'own-age bias' found that adults aged 19-30 are significantly better at recognizing faces within their own age bracket compared to older individuals. Conversely, adults aged 69-80 demonstrated equal accuracy in identifying both younger and older faces.
Psychologist Professor Ciro Civile suggests this discrepancy arises from accumulated life experience rather than ageism. Older individuals have consistently interacted with people of various ages, developing the cognitive ability to process and remember diverse facial characteristics. Younger adults, by contrast, have had less exposure to older faces, limiting their recognition capabilities in this regard.
Further experiments using inverted faces supported the theory that perceptual expertise, honed through repeated real-world exposure, is the driving factor behind this bias. These insights are crucial for high-stakes scenarios, such as eyewitness testimony, where recognition accuracy can be influenced by the age of the observer and the observed. The study suggests that targeted training could improve recognition across different age groups.




