Litcius/Paper detail

Efficient recognition of facial expressions does not require motor simulation

Gilles Vannuscorps, Michaël Andres, Alfonso Caramazza

2020eLife28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

What mechanisms underlie facial expression recognition? A popular hypothesis holds that efficient facial expression recognition cannot be achieved by visual analysis alone but additionally requires a mechanism of motor simulation - an unconscious, covert imitation of the observed facial postures and movements. Here, we first discuss why this hypothesis does not necessarily follow from extant empirical evidence. Next, we report experimental evidence against the central premise of this view: we demonstrate that individuals can achieve normotypical efficient facial expression recognition despite a congenital absence of relevant facial motor representations and, therefore, unaided by motor simulation. This underscores the need to reconsider the role of motor simulation in facial expression recognition.

Topics & Concepts

Facial expressionFacial expression recognitionNeuroscienceComputer scienceFacial recognition systemSpeech recognitionBiologyCommunicationArtificial intelligencePsychologyPattern recognition (psychology)Face Recognition and PerceptionAction Observation and SynchronizationFacial Nerve Paralysis Treatment and Research