[HTML][HTML] Emotion expression modulates perception of animacy from faces

NC Bowling, MJ Banissy - Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 2017 - Elsevier
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 2017Elsevier
Discriminating real human faces from artificial can be achieved quickly and accurately by
face-processing networks, but less is known about what stimulus qualities or interindividual
differences in the perceiver might influence whether a face is perceived as being alive. In the
present studies, morphed stimuli differing in levels of animacy were created. Participants
made judgements about whether the face appeared animate at different levels along the
morph continuum. The faces varied in terms of emotional expression (happy vs. neutral) and …
Abstract
Discriminating real human faces from artificial can be achieved quickly and accurately by face-processing networks, but less is known about what stimulus qualities or interindividual differences in the perceiver might influence whether a face is perceived as being alive. In the present studies, morphed stimuli differing in levels of animacy were created. Participants made judgements about whether the face appeared animate at different levels along the morph continuum. The faces varied in terms of emotional expression (happy vs. neutral) and gender. Male faces were judged to be animate at a lower threshold (i.e., closer to the inanimate end of the continuum) than female faces. Animacy was also perceived more readily in faces with happy expressions than neutral. These effects were observed across two separate studies involving different participants and different sets of stimuli (animate faces morphed with dolls or those morphed with computer generated faces). Finally, the influence of interindividual variability in personality traits on animacy perception was examined. This revealed that an externally oriented cognitive style, a component of alexithymia, was associated with lower thresholds for perceiving animacy, for animate faces morphed with dolls. The findings are discussed in relation to inter- and intra-individual variability in animacy perception and social interaction.
Elsevier
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