Processing of fear and anger facial expressions: the role of spatial frequency

被引:4
作者
Comfort, William E. [1 ]
Wang, Meng [2 ]
Benton, Christopher P. [3 ]
Zana, Yossi [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Fed ABC, Ctr Matemat Computacao & Cognicao, Santo Andre, Brazil
[2] Guangzhou Med Univ, Inst Neurosci, Guangzhou, Guangdong, Peoples R China
[3] Univ Bristol, Sch Expt Psychol, Bristol, Avon, England
来源
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY | 2013年 / 4卷
关键词
spatial frequency; face adaptation; fear; anger; facial expressions; face processing; VISUAL-ADAPTATION; FACE ADAPTATION; PERCEPTION; INFORMATION; SELECTIVITY; RECOGNITION; UNCERTAINTY; CONTRAST; POSITION; DISTINCT;
D O I
10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00213
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Spatial frequency (SF) components encode a portion of the affective value expressed in face images. The aim of this study was to estimate the relative weight of specific frequency spectrum bandwidth on the discrimination of anger and fear facial expressions. The general paradigm was a classification of the expression of faces morphed at varying proportions between anger and fear images in which SF adaptation and SF subtraction are expected to shift classification of facial emotion. A series of three experiments was conducted. In Experiment 1 subjects classified morphed face images that were unfiltered or filtered to remove either low (<8 cycles/face), middle (12-28 cycles/face), or high (>32 cycles/face) SF components. In Experiment 2 subjects were adapted to unfiltered or filtered prototypical (non-morphed) fear face images and subsequently classified morphed face images. In Experiment 3 subjects were adapted to unfiltered or filtered prototypical fear face images with the phase component randomized before classifying morphed face images. Removing mid frequency components from the target images shifted classification toward fear. The same shift was observed under adaptation condition to unfiltered and low- and middlerange filtered fear images. However, when the phase spectrum of the same adaptation stimuli was randomized, no adaptation effect was observed. These results suggest that medium SF components support the perception of fear more than anger at both low and high level of processing. They also suggest that the effect at high-level processing stage is related more to high-level featural and/or configural information than to the low-level frequency spectrum.
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页数:12
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