Young A W, Rowland D, Calder A J, Etcoff N L, Seth A, Perrett D I
MRC Applied Psychology Unit, Cambridge, UK.
Cognition. 1997 Jun;63(3):271-313. doi: 10.1016/s0010-0277(97)00003-6.
We report four experiments investigating the perception of photographic quality continua of interpolated ('morphed') facial expressions derived from prototypes of the 6 emotions in the Ekman and Friesen (1976) series (happiness, surprise, fear, sadness, disgust and anger). In Experiment 1, morphed images made from all possible pairwise combinations of expressions were presented in random order; subjects identified these as belonging to distinct expression categories corresponding to the prototypes at each end of the relevant continuum. This result was replicated in Experiment 2, which also included morphs made from a prototype with a neutral expression, and allowed 'neutral' as a response category. These findings are inconsistent with the view that facial expressions are recognised by locating them along two underlying dimensions, since such a view predicts that at least some transitions between categories should involve neutral regions or identification as a different emotion. Instead, they suggest that facial expressions of basic emotions are recognised by their fit to discrete categories. Experiment 3 used continua involving 6 emotions to demonstrate best discrimination of pairs of stimuli falling across category boundaries; this provides further evidence of categorical perception of facial expressions of emotion. However, in both Experiment 1 and Experiment 2, reaction time data showed that increasing distance from the prototype had a definite cost on ability to identify emotion in the resulting morphed face. Moreover, Experiment 4 showed that subjects had some insight into which emotions were blended to create specific morphed images. Hence, categorical perception effects were found even though subjects were sensitive to physical properties of these morphed facial expressions. We suggest that rapid classification of prototypes and better across boundary discriminability reflect the underlying organisation of human categorisation abilities.
我们报告了四项实验,这些实验研究了对从埃克曼和弗里森(1976年)系列中的6种情绪原型(快乐、惊讶、恐惧、悲伤、厌恶和愤怒)插值(“变形”)而来的面部表情的照片质量连续体的感知。在实验1中,由所有可能的表情两两组合制成的变形图像以随机顺序呈现;受试者将这些图像识别为属于与相关连续体两端的原型相对应的不同表情类别。这一结果在实验2中得到了重复,实验2还包括由带有中性表情的原型制成的变形图像,并允许将“中性”作为一个反应类别。这些发现与面部表情是通过沿着两个潜在维度定位来识别的观点不一致,因为这样的观点预测,至少某些类别之间的过渡应该涉及中性区域或被识别为不同的情绪。相反,它们表明基本情绪的面部表情是通过它们与离散类别的匹配来识别的。实验3使用涉及6种情绪的连续体来证明对跨越类别边界的刺激对的最佳辨别;这为情绪面部表情的分类感知提供了进一步的证据。然而,在实验1和实验2中,反应时间数据表明,与原型的距离增加会对识别由此产生的变形面孔中的情绪的能力产生明显的影响。此外,实验4表明,受试者对哪些情绪被混合以创建特定的变形图像有一定的洞察力。因此,即使受试者对这些变形面部表情的物理属性敏感,也发现了分类感知效应。我们认为,原型的快速分类和更好的跨边界可辨别性反映了人类分类能力的潜在组织。