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A shared mechanism for facial expression in human faces and face pareidolia

David Alais, Yiben Xu, Susan G. Wardle, Jessica Taubert

2021Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences48 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Facial expressions are vital for social communication, yet the underlying mechanisms are still being discovered. Illusory faces perceived in objects (face pareidolia) are errors of face detection that share some neural mechanisms with human face processing. However, it is unknown whether expression in illusory faces engages the same mechanisms as human faces. Here, using a serial dependence paradigm, we investigated whether illusory and human faces share a common expression mechanism. First, we found that images of face pareidolia are reliably rated for expression, within and between observers, despite varying greatly in visual features. Second, they exhibit positive serial dependence for perceived facial expression, meaning an illusory face (happy or angry) is perceived as more similar in expression to the preceding one, just as seen for human faces. This suggests illusory and human faces engage similar mechanisms of temporal continuity. Third, we found robust cross-domain serial dependence of perceived expression between illusory and human faces when they were interleaved, with serial effects larger when illusory faces preceded human faces than the reverse. Together, the results support a shared mechanism for facial expression between human faces and illusory faces and suggest that expression processing is not tightly bound to human facial features.

Topics & Concepts

Expression (computer science)Facial expressionPsychologyFace (sociological concept)Mechanism (biology)Cognitive psychologyFace perceptionEmotional expressionFusiform face areaMeaning (existential)CommunicationPerceptionComputer scienceNeuroscienceLinguisticsPhilosophyEpistemologyPsychotherapistProgramming languageFace Recognition and PerceptionVisual perception and processing mechanismsEvolutionary Psychology and Human Behavior