Gothard Katalin M, Erickson Cynthia A, Amaral David G
Department of Psychiatry, University of California Davis, 2230 Stokton Blvd., Sacramento, CA 95817, USA.
Anim Cogn. 2004 Jan;7(1):25-36. doi: 10.1007/s10071-003-0179-6. Epub 2003 Jul 9.
When novel and familiar faces are viewed simultaneously, humans and monkeys show a preference for looking at the novel face. The facial features attended to in familiar and novel faces, were determined by analyzing the visual exploration patterns, or scanpaths, of four monkeys performing a visual paired comparison task. In this task, the viewer was first familiarized with an image and then it was presented simultaneously with a novel and the familiar image. A looking preference for the novel image indicated that the viewer recognized the familiar image and hence differentiates between the familiar and the novel images. Scanpaths and relative looking preference were compared for four types of images: (1) familiar and novel objects, (2) familiar and novel monkey faces with neutral expressions, (3) familiar and novel inverted monkey faces, and (4) faces from the same monkey with different facial expressions. Looking time was significantly longer for the novel face, whether it was neutral, expressing an emotion, or inverted. Monkeys did not show a preference, or an aversion, for looking at aggressive or affiliative facial expressions. The analysis of scanpaths indicated that the eyes were the most explored facial feature in all faces. When faces expressed emotions such as a fear grimace, then monkeys scanned features of the face, which contributed to the uniqueness of the expression. Inverted facial images were scanned similarly to upright images. Precise measurement of eye movements during the visual paired comparison task, allowed a novel and more quantitative assessment of the perceptual processes involved the spontaneous visual exploration of faces and facial expressions. These studies indicate that non-human primates carry out the visual analysis of complex images such as faces in a characteristic and quantifiable manner.
当同时看到新奇面孔和熟悉面孔时,人类和猴子都表现出更倾向于注视新奇面孔。通过分析四只执行视觉配对比较任务的猴子的视觉探索模式(即扫描路径),确定了它们在熟悉面孔和新奇面孔中关注的面部特征。在这个任务中,观察者首先熟悉一张图像,然后将其与一张新奇图像和那张熟悉的图像同时呈现。对新奇图像的注视偏好表明观察者识别出了熟悉的图像,从而能够区分熟悉图像和新奇图像。对四种类型的图像比较了扫描路径和相对注视偏好:(1)熟悉和新奇的物体,(2)表情中性的熟悉和新奇猴子面孔,(3)熟悉和新奇的倒置猴子面孔,以及(4)同一猴子带有不同面部表情的面孔。无论是中性表情、表达情感的表情还是倒置的面孔,猴子对新奇面孔的注视时间都显著更长。猴子在注视攻击性或亲和性面部表情时没有表现出偏好或厌恶。对扫描路径的分析表明,眼睛是所有面孔中被探索最多的面部特征。当面孔表达恐惧鬼脸等情绪时,猴子会扫描有助于表情独特性的面部特征。倒置的面部图像与正立图像的扫描方式相似。在视觉配对比较任务中对眼动的精确测量,使得对涉及面孔和面部表情自发视觉探索的感知过程进行了一种新颖且更具定量性的评估。这些研究表明,非人类灵长类动物以一种特征性且可量化的方式对面孔等复杂图像进行视觉分析。