TY - JOUR
T1 - Stimulus generation, ratings, phoneme counts, and group classifications for 696 famous people by British adults over 40 years of age
AU - Smith-Spark, James H.
AU - Moore, Viv
AU - Valentine, Tim
AU - Sherman, Susan M.
PY - 2006/11
Y1 - 2006/11
N2 - Matching stimuli across a range of influencing variables is no less important for studies of face recognition than it is for those of word processing. Whereas a number of corpora exist to allow experimenters to select a carefully controlled set of word stimuli, similar databases for famous faces do not exist This article, therefore, provides researchers in the area of face recognition with a useful resource on which to base their stimulus selection. In the first phase of the investigation, British adults over 40 years of age were requested to generate the names of famous people (or celebrities) that they thought they would recognize and to write these down. The most frequentty named celebrities were then rated by adults from the same age population for familiarity, distinctiveness, and age of acquisition. The result is a database of 696 famous people, with an indication of their relative eminence in the public consciousness and rated for these important variables. Phoneme counts are also provided for each famous person, together with family name frequency counts in the general population, where available. Materials and links may be accessed at www.psychonomic.org/archive.
AB - Matching stimuli across a range of influencing variables is no less important for studies of face recognition than it is for those of word processing. Whereas a number of corpora exist to allow experimenters to select a carefully controlled set of word stimuli, similar databases for famous faces do not exist This article, therefore, provides researchers in the area of face recognition with a useful resource on which to base their stimulus selection. In the first phase of the investigation, British adults over 40 years of age were requested to generate the names of famous people (or celebrities) that they thought they would recognize and to write these down. The most frequentty named celebrities were then rated by adults from the same age population for familiarity, distinctiveness, and age of acquisition. The result is a database of 696 famous people, with an indication of their relative eminence in the public consciousness and rated for these important variables. Phoneme counts are also provided for each famous person, together with family name frequency counts in the general population, where available. Materials and links may be accessed at www.psychonomic.org/archive.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=34147214932&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3758/BF03193890
DO - 10.3758/BF03193890
M3 - Article
C2 - 17393829
AN - SCOPUS:34147214932
SN - 1554-351X
VL - 38
SP - 590
EP - 597
JO - Behavior research methods
JF - Behavior research methods
IS - 4
ER -