“…Some studies showed that females perform better than males at face processing tasks (e.g., Bowles et al, 2009;Heisz, Pottruff, & Shore, 2013;McBain, Norton, & Chen, 2009;Megreya, Bindemann, & Havard, 2011;Rehnman & Herlitz 2007;Sommer, Hildebrandt, Kunina-Habenicht, Schacht, & Wilhelm, 2013), although this female advantage was not found in all studies, in particular in the original report of the BFRT (Benton & Van Allen, 1968). This advantage is also observed sometimes only in specific conditions (see Weirich, Hoffmann, Meißner, Heinz, & Bengner, 2011), could be specific for female faces (the so-called "female own-sex bias"; see e.g., Lewin & Herlitz, 2002;Lovén, Herlitz, & Rehnman, 2011;McKelvie, Standing, St Jean, & Law, 1993;Megreya et al, 2011) with a reversed effect occasionally reported for male faces (male observers better than female observers; see e.g., McKelvie et al, 1993).…”