Or Charles C-F, Peterson Matthew F, Eckstein Miguel P
J Vis. 2015;15(13):12. doi: 10.1167/15.13.12.
Culture influences not only human high-level cognitive processes but also low-level perceptual operations. Some perceptual operations, such as initial eye movements to faces, are critical for extraction of information supporting evolutionarily important tasks such as face identification. The extent of cultural effects on these crucial perceptual processes is unknown. Here, we report that the first gaze location for face identification was similar across East Asian and Western Caucasian cultural groups: Both fixated a featureless point between the eyes and the nose, with smaller between-group than within-group differences and with a small horizontal difference across cultures (8% of the interocular distance). We also show that individuals of both cultural groups initially fixated at a slightly higher point on Asian faces than on Caucasian faces. The initial fixations were found to be both fundamental in acquiring the majority of information for face identification and optimal, as accuracy deteriorated when observers held their gaze away from their preferred fixations. An ideal observer that integrated facial information with the human visual system's varying spatial resolution across the visual field showed a similar information distribution across faces of both races and predicted initial human fixations. The model consistently replicated the small vertical difference between human fixations to Asian and Caucasian faces but did not predict the small horizontal leftward bias of Caucasian observers. Together, the results suggest that initial eye movements during face identification may be driven by brain mechanisms aimed at maximizing accuracy, and less influenced by culture. The findings increase our understanding of the interplay between the brain's aims to optimally accomplish basic perceptual functions and to respond to sociocultural influences.
文化不仅影响人类的高级认知过程,还影响低级感知操作。一些感知操作,如对脸部的初始眼动,对于提取支持诸如人脸识别等具有进化重要性任务的信息至关重要。文化对这些关键感知过程的影响程度尚不清楚。在此,我们报告,东亚和西方高加索文化群体在人脸识别时的首次注视位置相似:两者都注视眼睛和鼻子之间的一个无特征点,组间差异小于组内差异,且不同文化之间存在较小的水平差异(两眼间距的8%)。我们还表明,两个文化群体的个体最初在亚洲人脸的注视点略高于高加索人脸。研究发现,初始注视对于获取人脸识别的大部分信息至关重要且是最优的,因为当观察者将目光从他们偏好的注视点移开时,识别准确率会下降。一个将面部信息与人类视觉系统在整个视野中变化的空间分辨率相结合的理想观察者,在两个种族的脸上显示出相似的信息分布,并预测了人类的初始注视。该模型一致地复制了人类对亚洲人脸和高加索人脸注视之间的小垂直差异,但没有预测到高加索观察者的小水平向左偏差。总之,结果表明,人脸识别过程中的初始眼动可能由旨在最大化准确率的脑机制驱动,受文化影响较小。这些发现增进了我们对大脑旨在最佳完成基本感知功能并回应社会文化影响之间相互作用的理解。