In the face of danger: Specific viewing strategies for facial expressions of threat?

被引:46
作者
Green, MJ
Williams, LM
Davidson, D
机构
[1] Univ Sydney, Camperdown, NSW, Australia
[2] Westmead Hosp, Sydney, NSW, Australia
[3] Univ New England, Armidale, NSW, Australia
关键词
D O I
10.1080/02699930302282
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
We employed a psychophysiological marker of directed attention (the visual scanpath) to investigate visuocognitive processing of particular facial expressions in healthy individuals (N = 47). Visual scanpaths were recorded using video-oculography while subjects viewed digitised photographs of threat-related (fear, anger) and nonthreat (sad, happy, neutral) facial expressions. Hypotheses regarding the existence of a differential viewing strategy for threat-related facial expressions were based upon the adaptive significance of rapid detection and effective appraisal of social threat from conspecific face stimuli. When compared with each of the nonthreat faces, viewing strategies for expressions of anger and fear were characterised by increased distance between fixations (extended scanning), with more fixations, of longer duration, to feature areas of these faces. The extended scanning style suggests that threat-related faces evoke a "vigilant" style of scanning, whereby longer saccadic eye movements may reflect heightened autonomic responses to threat, while the increased foveal attention to feature areas of threat-related faces may facilitate cognitive appraisal of the personal significance and direction of impending threat. These results suggest the existence of distinct visuocognitive patterns for processing threat-related facial expressions, in response to the evolutionary advantage of detecting and appraising social threat.
引用
收藏
页码:779 / 786
页数:8
相关论文
共 26 条
[11]  
Groner R., 1984, THEORETICAL APPL ASP, V22, P523, DOI DOI 10.1016/S0166-4115(08)61874-9
[12]   EYE-MOVEMENT DATA - CUMULATIVE FIXATION TIME AND CLUSTER-ANALYSIS [J].
LATIMER, CR .
BEHAVIOR RESEARCH METHODS INSTRUMENTS & COMPUTERS, 1988, 20 (05) :437-470
[13]  
LeDoux J. E., 1996, EMOTIONAL BRAIN MYST
[14]   The face of wrath:: Critical features for conveying facial threat [J].
Lundqvist, D ;
Esteves, F ;
Öhman, A .
COGNITION & EMOTION, 1999, 13 (06) :691-711
[15]   FACE, CULTURE, AND JUDGMENTS OF ANGER AND FEAR - DO THE EYES HAVE IT [J].
MATSUMOTO, D .
JOURNAL OF NONVERBAL BEHAVIOR, 1989, 13 (03) :171-188
[16]   A NEW SERIES OF SLIDES DEPICTING FACIAL EXPRESSIONS OF AFFECT - A COMPARISON WITH THE PICTURES OF FACIAL AFFECT SERIES [J].
MAZURSKI, EJ ;
BOND, NW .
AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 1993, 45 (01) :41-47
[17]   Orienting of attention to threatening facial expressions presented under conditions of restricted awareness [J].
Mogg, K ;
Bradley, BP .
COGNITION & EMOTION, 1999, 13 (06) :713-740
[18]   Biases in eye movements to threatening facial expressions in generalized anxiety disorder and depressive disorder [J].
Mogg, K ;
Millar, N ;
Bradley, BP .
JOURNAL OF ABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2000, 109 (04) :695-704
[19]   A differential neural response in the human amygdala to fearful and happy facial expressions [J].
Morris, JS ;
Frith, CD ;
Perrett, DI ;
Rowland, D ;
Young, AW ;
Calder, AJ ;
Dolan, RJ .
NATURE, 1996, 383 (6603) :812-815
[20]   How do monkeys look at faces? [J].
Nahm, FKD ;
Perret, A ;
Amaral, DG ;
Albright, TD .
JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 1997, 9 (05) :611-623