School of Psychology, University of Lincoln, Lincoln, UK.
School of Life Sciences, University of Lincoln, Lincoln, UK.
Anim Cogn. 2020 May;23(3):465-476. doi: 10.1007/s10071-020-01348-5. Epub 2020 Feb 12.
Facial expressions are a core component of the emotional response of social mammals. In contrast to Darwin's original proposition, expressive facial cues of emotion appear to have evolved to be species-specific. Faces trigger an automatic perceptual process, and so, inter-specific emotion perception is potentially a challenge; since observers should not try to "read" heterospecific facial expressions in the same way that they do conspecific ones. Using dynamic spontaneous facial expression stimuli, we report the first inter-species eye-tracking study on fully unrestrained participants and without pre-experiment training to maintain attention to stimuli, to compare how two different species living in the same ecological niche, humans and dogs, perceive each other's facial expressions of emotion. Humans and dogs showed different gaze distributions when viewing the same facial expressions of either humans or dogs. Humans modulated their gaze depending on the area of interest (AOI) being examined, emotion, and species observed, but dogs modulated their gaze depending on AOI only. We also analysed if the gaze distribution was random across AOIs in both species: in humans, eye movements were not correlated with the diagnostic facial movements occurring in the emotional expression, and in dogs, there was only a partial relationship. This suggests that the scanning of facial expressions is a relatively automatic process. Thus, to read other species' facial emotions successfully, individuals must overcome these automatic perceptual processes and employ learning strategies to appreciate the inter-species emotional repertoire.
面部表情是社交哺乳动物情绪反应的核心组成部分。与达尔文最初的主张相反,情绪的表情线索似乎已经进化为具有物种特异性。面部会引发自动感知过程,因此,跨物种的情绪感知可能是一个挑战;因为观察者不应该试图以与同类相同的方式“解读”异源物种的面部表情。我们使用动态自发的面部表情刺激,报告了第一个针对完全不受约束的参与者且无需预先实验训练来保持对刺激注意力的跨物种眼动追踪研究,以比较生活在相同生态位的两个不同物种,人类和狗,如何感知彼此的情绪面部表情。当观看人类或狗的相同面部表情时,人类和狗表现出不同的注视分布。人类根据观察到的兴趣区域 (AOI)、情绪和观察到的物种来调节注视,但狗仅根据 AOI 来调节注视。我们还分析了在这两个物种中,注视分布是否在 AOIs 之间是随机的:在人类中,眼动与情绪表达中发生的诊断性面部运动没有相关性,而在狗中,只有部分相关性。这表明面部表情的扫描是一个相对自动的过程。因此,要成功读取其他物种的面部情绪,个体必须克服这些自动感知过程,并采用学习策略来欣赏跨物种的情感表达。