CR:PI Special Issue: Face Coverings, Considering the Implications for Face Perception and Speech Communication
Donate | Join/Renew | Print Page | Contact Us | Report Abuse | Sign In
CR:PI Special Issue: Face Coverings

#gocrpi 

ISSN: 2365-7464
(electronic version)

Cognitive Research: Principles & Implications

Published two times a year.
(May, Dec)

 

Special Issue Announcements

Call for Papers
The Cognitive Science of Medical Expertise

Coming Soon
Visual Search in Real-World & Applied Contexts

Read the Issue
The Psychology of Fake News

Read the Issue
Group Decision Making

Read the Issue
Why Spatial is Special in Education, Learning, and Everyday Activities

Read the Issue
Deception Detection

Read the Issue
Embodied Cognition
and STEM Learning

Read the Issue
Individual Differences in
Face Perception and
Person Recognition


Read the Issue
Effects of Neuroscience Explanations

 

 

 

Closed for Submissions

Face Coverings:
Considering the Implications for Face Perception and Speech Communication

Guest Editors
Karen Lander (University of Manchester, UK)
Gabrielle Saunders (University of Manchester, UK)

CR:PI Editor-in-Chief
Jeremy M. Wolfe (Brigham & Women's Hospital/Harvard Medical School, USA)


Special Issue

In response to the global COVID-19 pandemic, many governments around the world around the world required or strongly recommended the wearing of face coverings (masks) in public spaces. Many of these restrictions remain in place today. While the wearing of face coverings to prevent spread of disease is fairly common in some Asian countries, it seems likely that their use elsewhere will continue, even after the immediate risk of COVID-19 subsides.

Face coverings obscure the mouth and nose area of the face, leaving just the eye area exposed. As a result, they limit the information that a listener/observer can obtain from the face. This impacts perception of facial expressions and emotions, as well as access to cues for lip reading. Indeed, wearing a mask is known to conceal cues to human expression recognition (Carbon et al., 2020) and adversely affects human interaction and communication (Saunders et al., 2020; Wild & Korneld, 2021). Wearing a mask muffles the sound of the voice and makes it more challenging to understand speech by covering up cues to speech available from the face (Mheidly, Fares, Zalzale & Fares, 2020). Furthermore, there are reports of difficulties of matching for identity when face coverings are worn (Carragher & Hancock, 2020) and crimes being conducted with face coverings being used a means of disguise (Babwin & Dazio, 2020; Southall & Van Syskle, 2020). Face masks also present a challenge to computational face and speech recognition systems and algorithms, leading to problems in identity verification and speech recognition (Ngan, Grother & Hanaoka, 2020).

The proposed thematic series will highlight new work that characterizes the consequences of face masks on (a) the recognition and interpretation of facial expressions and emotions, (b) communication and social interactions, and (c) human and computational identity recognition and disguise. These will be addressed within the broad context of ways in which face perception and communication may change, comparisons of the social impact of face coverings in societies in which they are common versus those in which they are a new phenomenon, and changes in perceived interpersonal communication.

The overall goal is to develop accounts of how and why face coverings influence our face perception and speech communication, with specific attention to the relevant cognitive and behavioural mechanisms, as well as the practical implications and limitations.

Deadline

Closed for submissions. Manuscripts were due October 15, 2021. 

Submission Guidelines

If you have questions as to whether your work would be a good fit for this Article Collection, we welcome pre-submission inquiries. Please send an abstract and inquiry to one of the Editors. CR:PI is the open access journal of the Psychonomic Society. Its mission is to publish use-inspired basic research: fundamental cognitive research that grows from hypotheses about real-world problems. As with all Psychonomic Society journals, submissions to CRPI are subject to rigorous peer review.

For manuscripts accepted for the special issue, the publication fee may be fully or partially waived depending on the number of manuscripts accepted for the special issue. The authors should indicate when they submit a manuscript if they are requesting a waiver of the publication fee. Questions about fees can be directed to the Editor-in-Chief, Jeremy Wolfe, jwolfe@bwh.harvard.edu.

You can find manuscript submission details at http://cognitiveresearchjournal.springeropen.com/submission-guidelines/preparing-your-manuscript.

Guest Editors

Karen Lander (University of Manchester, UK)
Karen Lander is a Senior Lecturer in the Division of Neuroscience and Experimental Psychology. Her research examines the perception of faces and considers the importance of individual differences in recognition ability.

Gabrielle Saunders (University of Manchester, UK)
Gabrielle Saunders is a Senior Research Fellow at Manchester Centre for Audiology and Deafness, University of Manchester. Her research examines the psychosocial impacts of hearing loss and approaches to person-centred audiological rehabilitation.

 


Table of Contents
Author Instructions
Manuscript Submission
All Volumes & Issues
(Open Access Journal)

EDITORIAL TEAM

Editor in Chief
Jeremy Wolfe

Jeremy M. Wolfe
Harvard Medical School/Brigham and Women's Hospital, USA

Associate Editors

Christian Luhmann
Stony Brook University, USA

Nora S. Newcombe
Temple University, USA

John Wixted
University of California, San Diego, USA

Jeffrey M. Zacks
Washington University in St. Louis, USA

Editorial Board

Meet our Consulting Editors



           

 

  4300 Duraform Lane • Windsor, Wisconsin 53598 USA
Phone: +1 608-443-2472 • Fax: +1 608-333-0310 • Email: info@psychonomic.org

Use of Articles
Legal Notice

Privacy Policy