Abstract

Prior research based on static images has found limited improvement for recognising previously learnt faces in a new expression after several different facial expressions of these faces had been shown during the learning session. We investigated whether non-rigid motion of facial expression facilitates the learning process. In Experiment 1, participants remembered faces that were either presented in short video clips or still images. To assess the effect of exposure to expression variation, each face was either learnt through a single expression or three different expressions. Experiment 2 examined whether learning faces in video clips could generalise more effectively to a new view. The results show that faces learnt from video clips generalised effectively to a new expression with exposure to a single expression, whereas faces learnt from stills showed poorer generalisation with exposure to either single or three expressions. However, although superior recognition performance was demonstrated for faces learnt through video clips, dynamic facial expression did not create better transfer of learning to faces tested in a new view. The data thus fail to support the hypothesis that non-rigid motion enhances viewpoint invariance. These findings reveal both benefits and limitations of exposures to moving expressions for expression-invariant face recognition.

Highlights

  • A change of facial expression from training to test is known to impair recognition of unfamiliar faces1

  • Little is known about how exposure to a dynamic facial expression improves face recognition, recent research has shown that learning multiple still face images can facilitate face matching7–9 and recognition memory2

  • Research has shown that averaging across multiple images of a face can create a robust representation against a range of image variations including expression variation10

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Summary

Introduction

A change of facial expression from training to test is known to impair recognition of unfamiliar faces. Little is known about how exposure to a dynamic facial expression improves face recognition, recent research has shown that learning multiple still face images can facilitate face matching and recognition memory2 These studies would predict an advantage for faces learnt from multiple frames in a video clip because the dynamic information www.nature.com/scientificreports/. Johnston, Hill, and Troje later showed that this advantage can be demonstrated when an identity judgement of two sequentially displayed face stimuli was based on non-rigid motion alone, where non-rigid motion captured from different identities was applied to a single 3D model These studies, as pointed out by Thornton and Kourtzi, mainly address face recognition in the working memory because they used a matching task. We conducted two experiments; each addressed one of these questions

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