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ERPs responses to dominance features from human faces

Chengguo Miao, Xiaojun Li, Edmund Derrington, Frédéric Moisan, Yansong Li, Jean‐Claude Dreher

2022Scientific Reports10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Social dominance is an important feature of social life. Dominance has been proposed to be one of two trait dimensions underpinning social judgments of human faces. Yet, the neural bases of the ability to identify different dominance levels in others based on intrinsically facial cues remains poorly understood. Here, we used event-related potentials to determine the temporal dynamics of facial dominance evaluation based on facial features signaling physical strength/weakness in humans. Twenty-seven participants performed a dominance perception task where they passively viewed faces with different dominance levels. Dominance levels did not modulate an early component of face processing, known as the N170 component, but did modulate the late positive potential (LPP) component. These findings indicate that participants inferred dominance levels at a late stage of face evaluation. Furthermore, the highest level of dominant faces and the lowest level of submissive faces both elicited higher LPP amplitudes than faces with a neutral dominance level. Taken together, the present study provides new insights regarding the dynamics of the neurocognitive processes underlying facial dominance evaluation.

Topics & Concepts

Dominance (genetics)PsychologyCognitive psychologyTraitPerceptionFacial expressionSocial psychologyCommunicationBiologyNeuroscienceComputer scienceProgramming languageBiochemistryGeneFace Recognition and PerceptionEvolutionary Psychology and Human BehaviorPsychology of Moral and Emotional Judgment
ERPs responses to dominance features from human faces | Litcius