Rakover, S. (2002). Featural vs. configurational information in faces: A conceptual and empirical analysis. British Journal of Psychology, 93, 1-30.
The perception and memory of faces have been accounted for by the processing
of two kinds of facial information: featural and configurational. The starting
point of this article is the definition and accepted usage of these two concepts
of facial information. I discuss these definitions and their various ramifications
from three aspects: methodological, theoretical and empirical. In the section
on methodology, I review several of the basic manipulations for changing facial
information. In the theoretical section, I consider four fundamental hypotheses
associated with these two kinds of facial information: the featural, configurational,
holistic and norm hypotheses (the norm-based hypothesis and the 'hierarchy of
schemas' hypothesis). In the section on empirical evidence, I survey relevant
studies on the topic and consider these hypotheses through a description of
various empirical phenomena that carry clear implications for the subject of
the study. In conclusion, I propose two alternative directions for future research:
first, a 'taskinformation' approach, which involves specifying what information
is used for different tasks; and secondly, taking a different approach to the
definition of the visual features for face processing, for example by using
principal components analysis (PCA).