| Literature DB >> 31024397 |
Hayley Darke1, Simon J Cropper1, Olivia Carter1.
Abstract
Face-based tasks are used ubiquitously in the study of human perception and cognition. Video-based (dynamic) face stimuli are increasingly utilized by researchers because they have higher ecological validity than static images. However, there are few ready-to-use dynamic stimulus sets currently available to researchers that include non-emotional and non-face control stimuli. This paper outlines the development of three original dynamic stimulus sets: a set of emotional faces (fear and disgust), a set of non-emotional faces, and a set of car animations. Morphing software was employed to vary the intensity of the expression shown and to vary the similarity between actors. Manipulating these dimensions permits us to create tasks of varying difficulty that can be optimized to detect more subtle differences in face-processing ability. Using these new stimuli, two preliminary experiments were conducted to evaluate different aspects of facial identity recognition, emotion recognition, and non-face object discrimination. Results suggest that these five different tasks successfully avoided floor and ceiling effects in a healthy sample. A second experiment found that dynamic versions of the emotional stimuli were recognized more accurately than static versions, both for labeling, and discrimination paradigms. This indicates that, like previous emotion-only stimuli sets, the use of dynamic stimuli confers an advantage over image-based stimuli. These stimuli therefore provide a useful resource for researchers looking to investigate both emotional and non-emotional face-processing using dynamic stimuli. Moreover, these stimuli vary across crucial dimensions (i.e., face similarity and intensity of emotion) which allows researchers to modify task difficulty as required.Entities:
Keywords: dynamic; emotion processing; face recognition; morphing; vision
Year: 2019 PMID: 31024397 PMCID: PMC6465610 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.00757
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Behavioral studies comparing emotional processing of dynamic and static face stimuli in healthy controls.
| Harwood et al., | Labeling (6 choice) | Real | Dynamic > static (sadness and anger only) |
| Wehrle et al., | Labeling (10 choice) | Synthetic | Dynamic > static |
| Kamachi et al., | Rate intensity (7 choice) | Real | Static > dynamic |
| Ambadar et al., | Labeling (7 choice) | Real | Dynamic > static |
| Biele and Grabowska, | Rate intensity (4 choice) | Real | Dynamic > static |
| Weyers et al., | Labeling (6 choice); Rate intensity (7 choice) | Synthetic | Dynamic > static (both measures) |
| Yoshikawa and Sato, | Matching to same intensity (sliding scale) | Real | No difference, but rapid changes were perceived as more intense than slow changes. |
| Montagne et al., | Labeling (6 choice) | Real | Dynamic > static |
| Bould et al., | Labeling (7 choice) | Real | 25-frame video > 9-frame video > 2-frame video |
| Kätsyri and Sams, | Rate each stimulus according to each emotion (6) on a scale of 1–7. | Synthetic and real | Dynamic > static (synthetic faces only). |
| Cunningham and Wallraven, | Labeling (10 choice) | Real | Dynamic > static (except for happy and thinking faces) |
| Horstmann and Ansorge, | Visual search: Find the negative face in an array of positive faces (or vice versa) | Synthetic | Dynamic > static (faster search times) |
| Fujimura and Suzuki, | Labeling (6 choice) | Real | Dynamic > static (anger only) |
| Fiorentini and Viviani, | Labeling (2 choice) | Real | No difference |
| Recio et al., | Labeling (3 choice) | Synthetic | Dynamic > static (happiness only) |
| Gold et al., | Labeling (6 choices) | Real | No difference |
| Hoffmann et al., | Labeling (6 choices) | Real | Dynamic > static (fear and surprise) |
| Jiang et al., | Labeling (3 choices) | Synthetic | Static > dynamic |
| Kaufman and Johnston, | Same-or-different discrimination (static only) | Real | Dynamic cues produced faster “same” responses than static cues |
| Widen and Russell, | Labeling (open-ended responses) | Real | No difference (In children) |
| Calvo et al., | Labeling (6 choices) | Real | Dynamic > static |
Figure 1The image above shows partial image sequences (every other frame) from five video stimuli ranging in intensity of emotion. The top video shows the original video of an individual's face changing from neutral to an expression of disgust. This video was then morphed with the neutral face frame (leftmost frame) to reduce the intensity of the final expression (rightmost frame). Emotional intensity ranged from 100% (unedited video) to 33% intensity.
Figure 2The image above shows partial image sequences from six different videos stimuli. The top and bottom videos show two different individuals making the same motion (eyebrow raise). These videos were then morphed together to create four new videos which vary on a continuum from person A to person B.
Figure 3Partial image sequences from two different 3D video stimuli used in the Car Discrimination task. In each video, cars rotate from a side view to a 45-degree view. Car 1 and Car 2 are different models that are similar in appearance.
Figure 4Example trials for each of the five tasks: Emotion Discrimination, Emotion Labeling, Identity Discrimination, Sex Labeling, and Car Discrimination. Correct responses are (A) different, (B) disgust, (C) different, (D) male, (E) different.
Figure 5Mean accuracy performance across the five tasks. For (A,B), emotional intensity is presented on the y axis, where 100% indicates an unedited expression and 50% indicates an expression morphed 50% with a neutral expression. For (C), the x axis indicates the degree of similarity between the two faces presented in each same-or-different pair. For (D), the x axis shows the degree of morphing for each condition, where 40% indicates faces that are a 40/60 morph between a male face and a female face. Error bars indicate 95% confidence intervals around the mean and overlapping dots indicate the performance of individual participants.
Figure 6Performance (d') of healthy controls across the five dynamic tasks. Error bars indicate 95% confidence intervals. Dots indicate the performance of individual participants. *p < 0.01, **p < 0.001.
Figure 7Comparison of percent accuracy by emotional intensity for dynamic and static conditions on the Discrimination task (A) and the Labeling task (B). Error bars indicate 95% confidence intervals around means.
Figure 8mean d' scores (A) and mean response bias scores (B) for Dynamic and Static stimuli for the 2 tasks: Emotion Discrimination and Emotion Labeling. Error bars indicate 95% confidence intervals.
Figure 9Comparison of reaction times for static and dynamic conditions on the two tasks: Emotion Discrimination and Emotion Labeling.