Diagnostic features of emotional expressions are processed preferentially.

Diagnostic features of emotional expressions are differentially distributed across the face. The current study examined whether these diagnostic features are preferentially attended to even when they are irrelevant for the task at hand or when faces appear at different locations in the visual field....

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Elisa Scheller, Christian Büchel, Matthias Gamer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3405011?pdf=render
_version_ 1819277174134276096
author Elisa Scheller
Christian Büchel
Matthias Gamer
author_facet Elisa Scheller
Christian Büchel
Matthias Gamer
author_sort Elisa Scheller
collection DOAJ
description Diagnostic features of emotional expressions are differentially distributed across the face. The current study examined whether these diagnostic features are preferentially attended to even when they are irrelevant for the task at hand or when faces appear at different locations in the visual field. To this aim, fearful, happy and neutral faces were presented to healthy individuals in two experiments while measuring eye movements. In Experiment 1, participants had to accomplish an emotion classification, a gender discrimination or a passive viewing task. To differentiate fast, potentially reflexive, eye movements from a more elaborate scanning of faces, stimuli were either presented for 150 or 2000 ms. In Experiment 2, similar faces were presented at different spatial positions to rule out the possibility that eye movements only reflect a general bias for certain visual field locations. In both experiments, participants fixated the eye region much longer than any other region in the face. Furthermore, the eye region was attended to more pronouncedly when fearful or neutral faces were shown whereas more attention was directed toward the mouth of happy facial expressions. Since these results were similar across the other experimental manipulations, they indicate that diagnostic features of emotional expressions are preferentially processed irrespective of task demands and spatial locations. Saliency analyses revealed that a computational model of bottom-up visual attention could not explain these results. Furthermore, as these gaze preferences were evident very early after stimulus onset and occurred even when saccades did not allow for extracting further information from these stimuli, they may reflect a preattentive mechanism that automatically detects relevant facial features in the visual field and facilitates the orientation of attention towards them. This mechanism might crucially depend on amygdala functioning and it is potentially impaired in a number of clinical conditions such as autism or social anxiety disorders.
first_indexed 2024-12-23T23:51:55Z
format Article
id doaj.art-bd5f399976a04147a314e9ffbf51fb86
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1932-6203
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-23T23:51:55Z
publishDate 2012-01-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLoS ONE
spelling doaj.art-bd5f399976a04147a314e9ffbf51fb862022-12-21T17:25:22ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-0177e4179210.1371/journal.pone.0041792Diagnostic features of emotional expressions are processed preferentially.Elisa SchellerChristian BüchelMatthias GamerDiagnostic features of emotional expressions are differentially distributed across the face. The current study examined whether these diagnostic features are preferentially attended to even when they are irrelevant for the task at hand or when faces appear at different locations in the visual field. To this aim, fearful, happy and neutral faces were presented to healthy individuals in two experiments while measuring eye movements. In Experiment 1, participants had to accomplish an emotion classification, a gender discrimination or a passive viewing task. To differentiate fast, potentially reflexive, eye movements from a more elaborate scanning of faces, stimuli were either presented for 150 or 2000 ms. In Experiment 2, similar faces were presented at different spatial positions to rule out the possibility that eye movements only reflect a general bias for certain visual field locations. In both experiments, participants fixated the eye region much longer than any other region in the face. Furthermore, the eye region was attended to more pronouncedly when fearful or neutral faces were shown whereas more attention was directed toward the mouth of happy facial expressions. Since these results were similar across the other experimental manipulations, they indicate that diagnostic features of emotional expressions are preferentially processed irrespective of task demands and spatial locations. Saliency analyses revealed that a computational model of bottom-up visual attention could not explain these results. Furthermore, as these gaze preferences were evident very early after stimulus onset and occurred even when saccades did not allow for extracting further information from these stimuli, they may reflect a preattentive mechanism that automatically detects relevant facial features in the visual field and facilitates the orientation of attention towards them. This mechanism might crucially depend on amygdala functioning and it is potentially impaired in a number of clinical conditions such as autism or social anxiety disorders.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3405011?pdf=render
spellingShingle Elisa Scheller
Christian Büchel
Matthias Gamer
Diagnostic features of emotional expressions are processed preferentially.
PLoS ONE
title Diagnostic features of emotional expressions are processed preferentially.
title_full Diagnostic features of emotional expressions are processed preferentially.
title_fullStr Diagnostic features of emotional expressions are processed preferentially.
title_full_unstemmed Diagnostic features of emotional expressions are processed preferentially.
title_short Diagnostic features of emotional expressions are processed preferentially.
title_sort diagnostic features of emotional expressions are processed preferentially
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3405011?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT elisascheller diagnosticfeaturesofemotionalexpressionsareprocessedpreferentially
AT christianbuchel diagnosticfeaturesofemotionalexpressionsareprocessedpreferentially
AT matthiasgamer diagnosticfeaturesofemotionalexpressionsareprocessedpreferentially