Abstract

Observing familiar (known, recognisable) and socially relevant (personally important) faces elicits activation in the brain’s reward circuit. Although smiling faces are often used as social rewards in research, it is firstly unclear whether familiarity and social relevance modulate the processing of faces differently, and secondly whether this processing depends on the feedback context, i.e., if it is different when smiles are delivered depending on performance or in the absence of any action (passive viewing). In this preregistered study, we compared pupillary responses to smiling faces differing in subjective familiarity and social relevance. They were displayed in a passive viewing task and in an active task (a speeded visual short-term memory task). The pupils were affected only in the active task and only by subjective familiarity. Contrary to expectations, smaller dilations were observed in response to more familiar faces. Behavioural ratings supported the superior rewarding context of the active task, with higher reward ratings for the game than the passive task. This study offers two major insights. Firstly, familiarity plays a role in the processing of social rewards, as known and unknown faces influence the autonomic responses differently. Secondly, the feedback context is crucial in reward research as positive stimuli are rewarding when they are dependent on performance.

Highlights

  • We explored pupillary responses to smiling faces differing in their subjective familiarity, social relevance, and reward value

  • Our analyses revealed an effect of familiarity on pupillary responses, it was only manifested in the repeat-a-pattern game and, in contrast to our hypothesis, showed a negative direction: more familiar faces were linked to smaller pupil sizes

  • Familiarity plays a role in the processing of social rewards

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Summary

Introduction

Social cues conveyed by familiar faces are processed and recognised faster than cues from unfamiliar faces [6], and on the emotional level, familiarity facilitates one’s empathy towards the other [7]. Taken together, it seems that familiarity plays an exceptional role in human socio-cognitive functioning, which is furthered by research on social impairments, such as autism spectrum conditions (ASC). There is evidence for typical patterns of neural activation (mainly in the fusiform gyrus and the amygdala) for familiar faces in this group [9,10] This suggests that familiarity may normalise otherwise aberrant neural responses to faces in individuals with ASC. Familiarity has a unique standing in the human social functioning, which has even led to a shift in the proposition of humans being face experts, to that of humans being familiar face experts [11]

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