首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Transmission of Facial Expressions of Emotion Co-Evolved with Their Efficient Decoding in the Brain: Behavioral and Brain Evidence
Authors:Philippe G. Schyns  Lucy S. Petro  Marie L. Smith
Affiliation:1. Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging (CCNi), University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom.; 2. Department of Psychology, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom.;University of Granada, Spain
Abstract:Competent social organisms will read the social signals of their peers. In primates, the face has evolved to transmit the organism''s internal emotional state. Adaptive action suggests that the brain of the receiver has co-evolved to efficiently decode expression signals. Here, we review and integrate the evidence for this hypothesis. With a computational approach, we co-examined facial expressions as signals for data transmission and the brain as receiver and decoder of these signals. First, we show in a model observer that facial expressions form a lowly correlated signal set. Second, using time-resolved EEG data, we show how the brain uses spatial frequency information impinging on the retina to decorrelate expression categories. Between 140 to 200 ms following stimulus onset, independently in the left and right hemispheres, an information processing mechanism starts locally with encoding the eye, irrespective of expression, followed by a zooming out to processing the entire face, followed by a zooming back in to diagnostic features (e.g. the opened eyes in “fear”, the mouth in “happy”). A model categorizer demonstrates that at 200 ms, the left and right brain have represented enough information to predict behavioral categorization performance.
Keywords:
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号