Literature DB >> 25406159

Eye movements during emotion recognition in faces.

M W Schurgin1, J Nelson2, S Iida3, H Ohira3, J Y Chiao4, S L Franconeri4.   

Abstract

When distinguishing whether a face displays a certain emotion, some regions of the face may contain more useful information than others. Here we ask whether people differentially attend to distinct regions of a face when judging different emotions. Experiment 1 measured eye movements while participants discriminated between emotional (joy, anger, fear, sadness, shame, and disgust) and neutral facial expressions. Participant eye movements primarily fell in five distinct regions (eyes, upper nose, lower nose, upper lip, nasion). Distinct fixation patterns emerged for each emotion, such as a focus on the lips for joyful faces and a focus on the eyes for sad faces. These patterns were strongest for emotional faces but were still present when viewers sought evidence of emotion within neutral faces, indicating a goal-driven influence on eye-gaze patterns. Experiment 2 verified that these fixation patterns tended to reflect attention to the most diagnostic regions of the face for each emotion. Eye movements appear to follow both stimulus-driven and goal-driven perceptual strategies when decoding emotional information from a face.
© 2014 ARVO.

Entities:  

Keywords:  attention; emotion; eye movements; face recognition; fixation

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25406159     DOI: 10.1167/14.13.14

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Vis        ISSN: 1534-7362            Impact factor:   2.240


  40 in total

1.  Attentional bias to fearful faces in infants at high risk for autism spectrum disorder.

Authors:  Jennifer B Wagner; Brandon Keehn; Helen Tager-Flusberg; Charles A Nelson
Journal:  Emotion       Date:  2019-07-29

2.  Ventromedial frontal lobe damage affects interpretation, not exploration, of emotional facial expressions.

Authors:  Avinash R Vaidya; Lesley K Fellows
Journal:  Cortex       Date:  2019-01-14       Impact factor: 4.027

3.  Interaction Between Conscious and Unconscious Information-Processing of Faces and Words.

Authors:  Shiwen Ren; Hanyu Shao; Sheng He
Journal:  Neurosci Bull       Date:  2021-06-25       Impact factor: 5.203

4.  Face viewing behavior predicts multisensory gain during speech perception.

Authors:  Johannes Rennig; Kira Wegner-Clemens; Michael S Beauchamp
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2020-02

5.  The Nature of Facial Emotion Recognition Impairments in Children on the Autism Spectrum.

Authors:  Nathaniel A Shanok; Nancy Aaron Jones; Nikola N Lucas
Journal:  Child Psychiatry Hum Dev       Date:  2019-08

6.  Foveal processing of emotion-informative facial features.

Authors:  Nazire Duran; Anthony P Atkinson
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2021-12-02       Impact factor: 3.240

7.  The Relations of Attention to and Clarity of Feelings With Facial Affect Perception.

Authors:  Thomas Suslow; Anette Kersting
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2022-07-06

8.  Effects of wearing a transparent face mask on perception of facial expressions.

Authors:  Yuki Miyazaki; Miki Kamatani; Tomokazu Suda; Kei Wakasugi; Kaori Matsunaga; Jun I Kawahara
Journal:  Iperception       Date:  2022-06-15

9.  Own Race Eye-Gaze Bias for All Emotional Faces but Accuracy Bias Only for Sad Expressions.

Authors:  Xiaole Ma; Meina Fu; Xiaolu Zhang; Xinwei Song; Benjamin Becker; Renjing Wu; Xiaolei Xu; Zhao Gao; Keith Kendrick; Weihua Zhao
Journal:  Front Neurosci       Date:  2022-05-12       Impact factor: 5.152

10.  New insights into facial emotion recognition in Parkinson's disease with and without mild cognitive impairment from visual scanning patterns.

Authors:  Josefine Waldthaler; Charlotte Krüger-Zechlin; Lena Stock; Zain Deeb; Lars Timmermann
Journal:  Clin Park Relat Disord       Date:  2019-11-20
View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.