| Literature DB >> 29379032 |
Amanda Estéphan1,2, Daniel Fiset1, Camille Saumure1, Marie-Pier Plouffe-Demers1, Ye Zhang3,4, Dan Sun3,4, Caroline Blais5.
Abstract
Several previous studies of eye movements have put forward that, during face recognition, Easterners spread their attention across a greater part of their visual field than Westerners. Recently, we found that culture's effect on the perception of faces reaches mechanisms deeper than eye movements, therefore affecting the very nature of information sampled by the visual system: that is, Westerners globally rely more than Easterners on fine-grained visual information (i.e. high spatial frequencies; SFs), whereas Easterners rely more on coarse-grained visual information (i.e. low SFs). These findings suggest that culture influences basic visual processes; however, the temporal onset and dynamics of these culture-specific perceptual differences are still unknown. Here, we investigate the time course of SF use in Western Caucasian (Canadian) and East Asian (Chinese) observers during a face identification task. Firstly, our results confirm that Easterners use relatively lower SFs than Westerners, while the latter use relatively higher SFs. More importantly, our results indicate that these differences arise as early as 34 ms after stimulus onset, and remain stable through time. Our research supports the hypothesis that Westerners and Easterners initially rely on different types of visual information during face processing.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29379032 PMCID: PMC5788938 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-19971-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Example of a sequence of the SFs sampled across time, with the resulting image, for one trial. In order to save space, only a subset of the 18 frames were selected for display.
Figure 2Classification images illustrating Canadian and Chinese observers’ significant use of spatial frequencies across time, for Western Caucasian faces, East Asian faces and both face ethnicities combined. Group differences (i.e. Canadian observers - Chinese observers) are marked for each group and stimulus category: red edges delineate significant SF use biases for each cultural group.
Figure 3Canadian and Chinese observers’ SF tuning peaks (group average), for Western Caucasian and East Asian faces respectively.
Figure 4Example of the creation of one stimulus with the temporal SF filtering method.