Hills Charlotte, Romano Kali, Davies-Thompson Jodie, Barton Jason J S
Human Vision and Eye Movement Laboratory, Departments of Medicine (Neurology), Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
Human Vision and Eye Movement Laboratory, Departments of Medicine (Neurology), Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
Vision Res. 2014 Jul;100:18-28. doi: 10.1016/j.visres.2014.04.002. Epub 2014 Apr 16.
Prior work suggests that internal features contribute more than external features to face processing. Whether this asymmetry is also true of the mental representations of faces is not known. We used face adaptation to determine whether the internal and external features of faces contribute differently to the representation of facial identity, whether this was affected by familiarity, and whether the results differed if the features were presented in isolation or as part of a whole face. In a first experiment, subjects performed a study of identity adaptation for famous and novel faces, in which the adapting stimuli were whole faces, the internal features alone, or the external features alone. In a second experiment, the same faces were used, but the adapting internal and external features were superimposed on whole faces that were ambiguous to identity. The first experiment showed larger aftereffects for unfamiliar faces, and greater aftereffects from internal than from external features, and the latter was true for both familiar and unfamiliar faces. When internal and external features were presented in a whole-face context in the second experiment, aftereffects from either internal or external features was less than that from the whole face, and did not differ from each other. While we reproduce the greater importance of internal features when presented in isolation, we find this is equally true for familiar and unfamiliar faces. The dominant influence of internal features is reduced when integrated into a whole-face context, suggesting another facet of expert face processing.
先前的研究表明,在面部处理过程中,内部特征比外部特征的作用更大。而这种不对称性在面部的心理表征中是否同样存在尚不清楚。我们通过面部适应性实验来确定面部的内部和外部特征对面部身份表征的贡献是否不同,这是否受熟悉度的影响,以及当这些特征单独呈现或作为完整面部的一部分呈现时结果是否会有所不同。在第一个实验中,受试者对著名面孔和新面孔进行身份适应性研究,其中适应刺激物为完整面部、仅内部特征或仅外部特征。在第二个实验中,使用了相同的面孔,但适应的内部和外部特征叠加在身份模糊的完整面部上。第一个实验表明,不熟悉面孔的后效应更大,且内部特征产生的后效应大于外部特征,熟悉和不熟悉的面孔均是如此。在第二个实验中,当内部和外部特征在完整面部情境中呈现时,来自内部或外部特征的后效应均小于来自完整面部的后效应,且二者之间没有差异。虽然我们重现了内部特征单独呈现时更为重要的情况,但发现熟悉和不熟悉的面孔都是如此。当内部特征整合到完整面部情境中时,其主导影响会减弱,这表明了专家级面部处理的另一个方面。