Turning the other cheek: the viewpoint dependence of facial expression after-effects

Author:

Benton Christopher P1,Etchells Peter J1,Porter Gillian1,Clark Andrew P1,Penton-Voak Ian S1,Nikolov Stavri G2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Bristol12a Priory Road, Bristol BS8 1TU, UK

2. Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, University of BristolMerchant Venturers Building, Woodland Road, Bristol BS8 1UB, UK

Abstract

How do we visually encode facial expressions? Is this done by viewpoint-dependent mechanisms representing facial expressions as two-dimensional templates or do we build more complex viewpoint independent three-dimensional representations? Recent facial adaptation techniques offer a powerful way to address these questions. Prolonged viewing of a stimulus ( adaptation ) changes the perception of subsequently viewed stimuli (an after-effect ). Adaptation to a particular attribute is believed to target those neural mechanisms encoding that attribute. We gathered images of facial expressions taken simultaneously from five different viewpoints evenly spread from the three-quarter leftward to the three-quarter rightward facing view. We measured the strength of expression after-effects as a function of the difference between adaptation and test viewpoints. Our data show that, although there is a decrease in after-effect over test viewpoint, there remains a substantial after-effect when adapt and test are at differing three-quarter views. We take these results to indicate that neural systems encoding facial expressions contain a mixture of viewpoint-dependent and viewpoint-independent elements. This accords with evidence from single cell recording studies in macaque and is consonant with a view in which viewpoint-independent expression encoding arises from a combination of view-dependent expression-sensitive responses.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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