Аннотация:Face perception is one of the basic visual processes. Many studies have shown that the people are better able to recognize own-race faces, relative to faces from different, not so familiar races. This effect in known as the own-race bias (ORB or the one-race effect). The aim of the current study was to investigate the role of eye movement in this effect using the eye-tracking technology. Participants were show pictures of faces of 4 different races (Caucasian, African, South Eastern Asian and East Indian). During the first phase of the experiment 20 faces were show on monitor screen, 5 for each race. Next phase was a face recognition task, where participants viewed previously presented faces intermixed with 20 distracter faces, and were required to determine whether the face had been seen in the first phase. During the performance recognition accuracy and eye movements (fixation counts and durations, saccade counts and saccade amplitudes) were recorded. The results showed that the ORB was replicated, with superior recognition of own-race faces, relative to other-race faces but no significant difference in eye movement parameters were found. The analysis revealed that regardless of the viewed face race there were significant difference in fixation duration and saccade parameters during the learning phase, relative to the recognition phase. The present results may suggest that eye movement strategies may not be ideal for (показать) ORB, but may actually show on the nature of the task, its purpose and complexity or individual analysis strategies.