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      A shared mechanism for facial expression in human faces and face pareidolia

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          Abstract

          Facial expressions are vital for social communication, yet the underlying mechanisms are still being discovered. Illusory faces perceived in objects (face pareidolia) are errors of face detection that share some neural mechanisms with human face processing. However, it is unknown whether expression in illusory faces engages the same mechanisms as human faces. Here, using a serial dependence paradigm, we investigated whether illusory and human faces share a common expression mechanism. First, we found that images of face pareidolia are reliably rated for expression, within and between observers, despite varying greatly in visual features. Second, they exhibit positive serial dependence for perceived facial expression, meaning an illusory face (happy or angry) is perceived as more similar in expression to the preceding one, just as seen for human faces. This suggests illusory and human faces engage similar mechanisms of temporal continuity. Third, we found robust cross-domain serial dependence of perceived expression between illusory and human faces when they were interleaved, with serial effects larger when illusory faces preceded human faces than the reverse. Together, the results support a shared mechanism for facial expression between human faces and illusory faces and suggest that expression processing is not tightly bound to human facial features.

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          Most cited references45

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          Recognizing emotion from facial expressions: psychological and neurological mechanisms.

          Recognizing emotion from facial expressions draws on diverse psychological processes implemented in a large array of neural structures. Studies using evoked potentials, lesions, and functional imaging have begun to elucidate some of the mechanisms. Early perceptual processing of faces draws on cortices in occipital and temporal lobes that construct detailed representations from the configuration of facial features. Subsequent recognition requires a set of structures, including amygdala and orbitofrontal cortex, that links perceptual representations of the face to the generation of knowledge about the emotion signaled, a complex set of mechanisms using multiple strategies. Although recent studies have provided a wealth of detail regarding these mechanisms in the adult human brain, investigations are also being extended to nonhuman primates, to infants, and to patients with psychiatric disorders.
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            Serial dependence in visual perception

            Visual input often arrives in a noisy and discontinuous stream, owing to head and eye movements, occlusion, lighting changes, and many other factors. Yet the physical world is generally stable—objects and physical characteristics rarely change spontaneously. How then does the human visual system capitalize on continuity in the physical environment over time? Here we show that visual perception is serially dependent, using both prior and present input to inform perception at the present moment. Using an orientation judgment task, we found that even when visual input changes randomly over time, perceived orientation is strongly and systematically biased toward recently seen stimuli. Further, the strength of this bias is modulated by attention and tuned to the spatial and temporal proximity of successive stimuli. These results reveal a serial dependence in perception characterized by a spatiotemporally tuned, orientation-selective operator—which we call a continuity field—that may promote visual stability over time.
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              Attention alters appearance.

              Does attention alter appearance? This critical issue, debated for over a century, remains unsettled. From psychophysical evidence that covert attention affects early vision-it enhances contrast sensitivity and spatial resolution-and from neurophysiological evidence that attention increases the neuronal contrast sensitivity (contrast gain), one could infer that attention changes stimulus appearance. Surprisingly, few studies have directly investigated this issue. Here we developed a psychophysical method to directly assess the phenomenological correlates of attention in humans. We show that attention alters appearance; it boosts the apparent stimulus contrast. These behavioral results are consistent with neurophysiological findings suggesting that attention changes the strength of a stimulus by increasing its 'effective contrast' or salience.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: ConceptualizationRole: Formal analysisRole: MethodologyRole: Writing-original draft
                Role: InvestigationRole: Writing-original draft
                Role: ConceptualizationRole: Methodology
                Role: ConceptualizationRole: MethodologyRole: Writing-original draft
                Journal
                Proc Biol Sci
                Proc Biol Sci
                RSPB
                royprsb
                Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
                The Royal Society
                0962-8452
                1471-2954
                July 14, 2021
                July 7, 2021
                July 7, 2021
                : 288
                : 1954
                : 20210966
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ]School of Psychology, The University of Sydney, , Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
                [ 2 ]Laboratory of Brain and Cognition, National Institute of Mental Health, , Bethesda, MD, USA
                Author notes
                [†]

                These authors contributed equally to this study.

                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0002-0411-940X
                http://orcid.org/0000-0003-2216-7461
                Article
                rspb20210966
                10.1098/rspb.2021.0966
                8261219
                34229489
                47692a87-50b3-4d96-b6dd-2a73a8d9c407
                © 2021 The Authors.

                Published by the Royal Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/, which permits unrestricted use, provided the original author and source are credited.

                History
                : April 28, 2021
                : June 15, 2021
                Funding
                Funded by: Australian Research Council, http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100000923;
                Award ID: DP190101537
                Categories
                1001
                14
                42
                133
                Neuroscience and Cognition
                Research Articles
                Custom metadata
                July 14, 2021

                Life sciences
                facial expression,emotion processing,serial dependence,pareidolia,rapid adaptation
                Life sciences
                facial expression, emotion processing, serial dependence, pareidolia, rapid adaptation

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