Abstract
Fearful facial expressions tend to be more salient than other expressions. This threat bias is to some extent driven by simple low-level image properties, rather than the high-level emotion interpretation of stimuli. It might be expected therefore that different expressions will, on average, have different physical contrasts. However, studies tend to normalise stimuli for RMS contrast, potentially removing a naturally-occurring difference in salience. We assessed whether images of faces differ in both physical and apparent contrast across expressions. We measured physical RMS contrast and the Fourier amplitude spectra of 5 emotional expressions prior to contrast normalisation. We also measured expression-related differences in perceived contrast. Fear expressions have a steeper Fourier amplitude slope compared to neutral and angry expressions, and consistently significantly lower contrast compared to other faces. This effect is more pronounced at higher spatial frequencies. With the exception of stimuli containing only low spatial frequencies, fear expressions appeared higher in contrast than a physically matched reference. These findings suggest that contrast normalisation artificially boosts the perceived salience of fear expressions; an effect that may account for perceptual biases observed for spatially filtered fear expressions.
Highlights
Fearful facial expressions are especially salient to the human visual system relative to other expressions [1,2]
Significant comparisons reveal that broadband fear expressions are 3.37, 5.92, and 4.73% lower in RMS contrast compared to neutral, angry and disgust faces, and do not differ compared to happy faces
Fearful faces tend to be lower in RMS contrast as a result of a reduction in contrast primarily at high spatial frequencies
Summary
Fearful facial expressions are especially salient to the human visual system relative to other expressions [1,2]. Expressions of fear capture and orient visual spatial attention [3,4,5], receive preferential allocation of attentional resources [6,7,8, 3], and emerge faster under conditions of visual suppression [9,10]. This bias for fearful expressions occurs in peripheral vision [11,12], and when observers report being unaware of having been presented with a face [13,14,15].
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