Article

Saccadic eye movements are deployed faster for salient facial stimuli, but are relatively indifferent to their emotional content

Details

Citation

Webb ALM, Asher JM & Hibbard PB (2022) Saccadic eye movements are deployed faster for salient facial stimuli, but are relatively indifferent to their emotional content. Hibbard P (Researcher) Vision Research, 198, Art. No.: 108054. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.visres.2022.108054

Abstract
The present study explores the threat bias for fearful facial expressions using saccadic latency, with a particular focus on the role of low-level facial information, including spatial frequency and contrast. In a simple localisation task, participants were presented with spatially-filtered versions of neutral, fearful, angry and happy faces. Together, our findings show that saccadic responses are not biased toward fearful expressions compared to neutral, angry or happy counterparts, regardless of their spatial frequency content. Saccadic response times are, however, significantly influenced by the spatial frequency and contrast of facial stimuli. We discuss the implications of these findings for the threat bias literature, and the extent to which image processing can be expected to influence behavioural responses to socially-relevant facial stimuli.

Keywords
Facial expression; Threat bias; Emotion; Saccadic latency; Spatial frequency; Contrast; Eye movements; Reaction time

Journal
Vision Research: Volume 198

StatusPublished
FundersEconomic and Social Research Council
Publication date30/09/2022
Publication date online31/05/2022
Date accepted by journal16/04/2022
PublisherElsevier BV
ISSN0042-6989

People (2)

Dr Jordi Asher

Dr Jordi Asher

Lecturer in Psychology, Psychology

Professor Paul Hibbard

Professor Paul Hibbard

Professor in Psychology, Psychology