Abstract

Facial features differ in the amount of expressive information they convey. Specifically, eyes are argued to be essential for fear recognition, while smiles are crucial for recognising happy expressions. In three experiments, we tested whether expression modulates the perceptual saliency of diagnostic facial features and whether the feature’s saliency depends on the face configuration. Participants were presented with masked facial features or noise at perceptual conscious threshold. The task was to indicate whether eyes (experiments 1-3A) or a mouth (experiment 3B) was present. The expression of the face and its configuration (i.e. spatial arrangement of the features) were manipulated. Experiment 1 compared fearful with neutral expressions, experiments 2 and 3 compared fearful versus happy expressions. The detection accuracy data was analysed using Signal Detection Theory (SDT), to examine the effects of expression and configuration on perceptual precision (d’) and response bias (c), separately. Across all three experiments, fearful eyes were detected better (higher d’) than neutral and happy eyes. Eyes were more precisely detected than mouths, whereas smiles were detected better than fearful mouths. The configuration of the features had no consistent effects across the experiments on the ability to detect expressive features. But facial configuration affected consistently the response bias. Participants used a more liberal criterion for detecting the eyes in canonical configuration and fearful expression. Finally, the power in low spatial frequency of a feature predicted its discriminability index. The results suggest that expressive features are perceptually more salient with a higher d’ due to changes at the low-level visual properties, with emotions and configuration affecting perception through top-down processes, as reflected by the response bias.

Highlights

  • Facial expressions allow humans to extrapolate cues for navigating the social world

  • This study extends previous research to demonstrate that fearful eyes are perceptually salient even if expression is irrelevant to the task, and even after we have removed effects related to response bias

  • We investigated the perceptual saliency of the eyes and mouth as a function of facial expression and configuration via signal detection theory

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Summary

Introduction

Facial expressions allow humans to extrapolate cues for navigating the social world. It enables people to infer mental states of others and, in turn, adjust their behaviour to match another’s emotional state. It is suggested that different facial features play a prominent role in the recognition of emotion [1, 2]. The eyes are perceived as a diagnostic region for fear, whereas a smile reflects happiness [2, 3]. An inability to spontaneously fixate on the eyes impairs the ability to recognize fearful expression as seen in autism [3] and schizophrenia [4].

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