The findings by researchers from McMaster University in Canada may answer long-standing questions about why some people can remember faces easily while others quickly forget someone they have just met.
"The way we move our eyes across a new individual's face affects our ability to recognise that individual later," said Jennifer Heisz, a research fellow at the Rotman Institute at Baycrest and newly appointed assistant professor in the Department of Kinesiology at McMaster University.
She co-authored the paper with David Shore, psychology professor at McMaster and psychology graduate student Molly Pottruff.
Eye tracking technology was used to monitor where study participants looked - be it eyes, nose or mouth - while they were shown a series of randomly selected faces on a computer screen. Each face was assigned a name that participants were asked to remember.
"We found that women fixated on the features far more than men, but this strategy operates completely outside of our awareness. Individuals don't usually notice where their eyes fixate, so it's all subconscious," Heisz said.
The implications are exciting, she said, because it means anyone can be taught to scan more and potentially have better memory.
"The results open the possibility that changing our eye movement pattern may lead to better memory. Increased scanning may prove to be a simple strategy to improve face memory in the general population, especially for individuals with memory impairment like older adults," Shore said.
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