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The effect of masks on the recognition of facial expressions: A true-to-life study on the perception of basic emotions

Michael Christian Leitner, Verena Meurer, Florian Hutzler, Sarah Schuster, Stefan Hawelka

2022Frontiers in Psychology17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Mouth-to-nose face masks became ubiquitous due to the COVID-19 pandemic. This ignited studies on the perception of emotions in masked faces. Most of these studies presented still images of an emotional face with a face mask digitally superimposed upon the nose-mouth region. A common finding of these studies is that smiles become less perceivable. The present study investigated the recognition of basic emotions in video sequences of faces. We replicated much of the evidence gathered from presenting still images with digitally superimposed masks. We also unearthed fundamental differences in comparison to existing studies with regard to the perception of smile which is less impeded than previous studies implied.

Topics & Concepts

PerceptionPsychologyFace (sociological concept)Facial expressionFace perceptionCognitive psychologyFacial recognition systemCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)CommunicationPattern recognition (psychology)LinguisticsMedicineDiseasePathologyInfectious disease (medical specialty)NeurosciencePhilosophyFace Recognition and PerceptionFace recognition and analysisAesthetic Perception and Analysis
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