Gender differences in face pareidolia: The effect of cognitive style and judgment criteria

Face pareidolia refers to perceiving facial features on inanimate objects. Previous studies have identified gender differences in pareidolia, but the factors behind these differences remain unclear. This study examined potential influences, including task requirement, low-frequency information encod...

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Main Authors: Hao Wang, Zhigang Yang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2025-07-01
Series:i-Perception
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/20416695251364206
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author Hao Wang
Zhigang Yang
author_facet Hao Wang
Zhigang Yang
author_sort Hao Wang
collection DOAJ
description Face pareidolia refers to perceiving facial features on inanimate objects. Previous studies have identified gender differences in pareidolia, but the factors behind these differences remain unclear. This study examined potential influences, including task requirement, low-frequency information encoding ability, and cognitive style. University student participants reported what they saw in face-like object images and rated their face-likeness. A delayed matching task with blurred faces assessed encoding ability, and the Navon task examined cognitive style. Results showed that gender differences were influenced by task demands: women were more likely than men to perceive faces in objects, and this was not related to facial configuration processing. Additionally, a global processing tendency predicted higher pareidolia in women but not in men. Our findings suggest that gender differences in pareidolia are shaped by judgment criteria, with women adopting more relaxed criteria. This research contributes to understanding gender differences in social cognition.
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institution Kabale University
issn 2041-6695
language English
publishDate 2025-07-01
publisher SAGE Publishing
record_format Article
series i-Perception
spelling doaj-art-a4e47ccaa03c4c78b973e9b7b0a7b4292025-08-25T15:03:51ZengSAGE Publishingi-Perception2041-66952025-07-011610.1177/20416695251364206Gender differences in face pareidolia: The effect of cognitive style and judgment criteriaHao WangZhigang YangFace pareidolia refers to perceiving facial features on inanimate objects. Previous studies have identified gender differences in pareidolia, but the factors behind these differences remain unclear. This study examined potential influences, including task requirement, low-frequency information encoding ability, and cognitive style. University student participants reported what they saw in face-like object images and rated their face-likeness. A delayed matching task with blurred faces assessed encoding ability, and the Navon task examined cognitive style. Results showed that gender differences were influenced by task demands: women were more likely than men to perceive faces in objects, and this was not related to facial configuration processing. Additionally, a global processing tendency predicted higher pareidolia in women but not in men. Our findings suggest that gender differences in pareidolia are shaped by judgment criteria, with women adopting more relaxed criteria. This research contributes to understanding gender differences in social cognition.https://doi.org/10.1177/20416695251364206
spellingShingle Hao Wang
Zhigang Yang
Gender differences in face pareidolia: The effect of cognitive style and judgment criteria
i-Perception
title Gender differences in face pareidolia: The effect of cognitive style and judgment criteria
title_full Gender differences in face pareidolia: The effect of cognitive style and judgment criteria
title_fullStr Gender differences in face pareidolia: The effect of cognitive style and judgment criteria
title_full_unstemmed Gender differences in face pareidolia: The effect of cognitive style and judgment criteria
title_short Gender differences in face pareidolia: The effect of cognitive style and judgment criteria
title_sort gender differences in face pareidolia the effect of cognitive style and judgment criteria
url https://doi.org/10.1177/20416695251364206
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AT zhigangyang genderdifferencesinfacepareidoliatheeffectofcognitivestyleandjudgmentcriteria