Lecker Maya, Hallock Scott, Danielson Axel, Van Aertrickc Maximilien, Kindt Merel, Aviezer Hillel
Department of Psychology, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem 9190501, Israel.
WMTI Productions, Inc., Encino, CA 91436.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2025 Mar 18;122(11):e2414677122. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2414677122. Epub 2025 Mar 12.
Central emotion theories assume that during threatening and dangerous events the human face signals a prototypical, distinct, and universally recognized expression of fear which can be accurately decoded by conspecific perceivers. Due to the importance of fear expressions, an unusually large body of research has been dedicated to exploring their evolutionary origins, neurobiological mechanisms, and clinical significance. However, these studies typically utilize highly recognizable posed actor portrayals presumed to closely resemble the diagnostic physical appearance of real-life fearful faces. Here, we challenge this diagnosticity assumption. Following context-dependent frameworks (Barrett, 2017), we hypothesized that extrafacial context (e.g., situational information, body posture, etc.) plays a far greater role in fear communication than the signal of the isolated face. In 12 preregistered experiments (N = 4,180), we examined the perception of authentic, real-life videos documenting a diverse range of intense fear-inducing situations (e.g., height jumping, physical attacks, exposure to phobia triggers). Participants viewed the face alone, the context with no face, or the full video while various response methods of emotion perception were tested (forced choice, open-ended, multiple emotion scales, valence-arousal ratings). Across experiments, videos of the faces alone failed to communicate fear in a reliable manner. In sharp contrast, context with no faces, and faces with context were clearly and robustly perceived as fearful, with medium to large effect sizes. These findings suggest that despite the undisputed importance of perceiving fear reactions, facial expressions alone bear minimal diagnostic value, while context plays a critical role in real-life fear perception.
核心情绪理论认为,在威胁和危险事件中,人类的面部会传达出一种典型、独特且被普遍认可的恐惧表情,同种个体能够准确解读这种表情。由于恐惧表情的重要性,大量研究致力于探索其进化起源、神经生物学机制和临床意义。然而,这些研究通常使用高度可识别的演员摆拍形象,假定其与现实生活中恐惧面部的诊断性外貌极为相似。在此,我们对这一诊断性假设提出质疑。遵循情境依赖框架(巴雷特,2017),我们假设面部之外的情境(如情境信息、身体姿势等)在恐惧交流中所起的作用远比孤立面部的信号大得多。在12项预先注册的实验(N = 4180)中,我们研究了记录各种强烈恐惧诱发情境(如高空跳跃、身体攻击、接触恐惧症触发因素)的真实生活视频的感知情况。参与者分别观看单独的面部、无面部的情境或完整视频,同时测试了多种情绪感知的反应方法(强制选择、开放式、多情绪量表、效价-唤醒评分)。在所有实验中,单独的面部视频都无法可靠地传达恐惧。与之形成鲜明对比的是,无面部的情境以及有情境的面部被清晰且强烈地感知为恐惧,效应量为中等至较大。这些发现表明,尽管感知恐惧反应的重要性无可争议,但仅面部表情具有的诊断价值极小,而情境在现实生活中的恐惧感知中起着关键作用。