Adaptive Face Coding Contributes to Individual Differences in Facial Expression Recognition Independently of Affective Factors
Date
Authors
Palermo, Romina
Jeffery, Linda
Lewandowsky, Jessica
Irons, Jessica
Burton, Nichola
Fiorentini, Chiara
Dawel, Amy
McKone, Elinor
Rhodes, Gillian
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Abstract
There are large, reliable individual differences in the recognition of facial expressions of emotion across the general population. The sources of this variation are not yet known. We investigated the contribution of a key face perception mechanism, adaptive coding, which calibrates perception to optimize discrimination within the current perceptual “diet.” We expected that a facial expression system that readily recalibrates might boost sensitivity to variation among facial expressions, thereby enhancing recognition ability. We measured adaptive coding strength with an established facial expression aftereffect task and measured facial expression recognition ability with 3 tasks optimized for the assessment of individual differences. As expected, expression recognition ability was positively associated with the strength of facial expression aftereffects. We also asked whether individual variation in affective factors might contribute to expression recognition ability, given that clinical levels of such traits have previously been linked to ability. Expression recognition ability was negatively associated with self-reported anxiety but not with depression, mood, or degree of autism-like or empathetic traits. Finally, we showed that the perceptual factor of adaptive coding contributes to variation in expression recognition ability independently of affective factors.
Description
Citation
Collections
Source
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
2037-12-31
Downloads
File
Description