Intergroup Biases in Memory – UCR | Riverside Social & Spatial Cognition Lab
Overcoming the other‐race effect in infancy with multisensory redundancy: 10–12‐month‐olds discriminate dynamic other‐race faces producing speech - Minar - 2018 - Developmental Science - Wiley Online Library
Frontiers | The Own-Race Bias for Face Recognition in a Multiracial Society
Predicting high confidence errors in eyewitness memory: The role of face recognition ability, decision-time, and justifications.
A Memory Computational Basis for the Other-Race Effect | Scientific Reports
Perceptual Other-Race Training Reduces Implicit Racial Bias | PLOS ONE
Frontiers | Why Some Faces won't be Remembered: Brain Potentials Illuminate Successful Versus Unsuccessful Encoding for Same-Race and Other-Race Faces
An encoding advantage for own-race versus other-race faces
Why do people of other races all look alike? | Neuroscience | The Guardian
CogBlog – A Cognitive Psychology Blog » Cross-Race Effect
The Science Behind 'They All Look Alike to Me' - The New York Times
Bigotry Or Mistake? The Science of Finding Face Similarity in One Race | The Swaddle
Perceptual Training Prevents the Emergence of the Other Race Effect during Infancy | PLOS ONE
CogBlog – A Cognitive Psychology Blog » Own-race Bias: Why Some People Might Look The Same to You
Hollins Students Present Research on Cross-Race Effect to the Southeastern Psychological Association
Cross-race effect - Wikipedia
Cross-race effect - Wikipedia
Processes Underlying the Cross-Race Effect: An Investigation of Holistic, Featural, and Relational Processing of Own-Race versus Other-Race Faces | Semantic Scholar
The other-race effect does not rely on memory: Evidence from a matching task
The other-race effect and holistic processing across racial groups | Scientific Reports
Cross-Race Effect Meaning | Pop Culture by Dictionary.com
Postencoding cognitive processes in the cross-race effect: Categorization and individuation during face recognition | SpringerLink
Cognitive control, attention, and the other race effect in memory | PLOS ONE