TY - JOUR
T1 - Visual search for schematic emotional faces risks perceptual confound
AU - Mak-Fan, Kathleen M.
AU - Thompson, William F.
AU - Green, Robin E.A.
N1 - Funding Information:
Correspondence should be addressed to: Kathleen Mak-Fan, Department of Psychology, University of Toronto, 100 St. George Street, Toronto, Ontario, M5S 3G3. E-mail: [email protected] The research and manuscript preparation were supported by Discovery grants from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) awarded to the second and third authors and the Australian Research Council awarded to the second author, and a post-graduate scholarship from NSERC to the first author. The authors would like to thank Elaine Fox for providing the stimuli for use in these experiments, Le-Anh Ngo and Michelle Albornoz for research assistance, and reviewers for helpful comments.
PY - 2011/6
Y1 - 2011/6
N2 - Several studies have used a visual search task to demonstrate that schematic negative-face targets are found faster and/or more efficiently than positive ones, with these findings taken as evidence that negative emotional expression is capable of guiding attentional allocation in visual search A common hypothesis is that these effects should be disrupted by face inversion; however, this has not been consistently demonstrated, and raises the possibility of a perceptual confound One candidate confound is the feature of "closure" (see Wolfe & Horowitz, 2004) caused by the down-turned mouth adjacent to edge of the face This was investigated in the present series of experiments In Experiment 1, the speed advantage for upright negative faces was replicated In Experiment 2, the effect was not disrupted with inversion, and an efficiency advantage emerged, suggesting that perceptual features could be causing the advantage In Experiment 3, speed and efficiency effects were seen when this perceptual characteristic remained but face features were scrambled Taken together, these findings suggest that visual search using schematic faces containing a curved-line mouth feature cannot provide a valid test of guided search by negative facial emotion unless this confound is controlled.
AB - Several studies have used a visual search task to demonstrate that schematic negative-face targets are found faster and/or more efficiently than positive ones, with these findings taken as evidence that negative emotional expression is capable of guiding attentional allocation in visual search A common hypothesis is that these effects should be disrupted by face inversion; however, this has not been consistently demonstrated, and raises the possibility of a perceptual confound One candidate confound is the feature of "closure" (see Wolfe & Horowitz, 2004) caused by the down-turned mouth adjacent to edge of the face This was investigated in the present series of experiments In Experiment 1, the speed advantage for upright negative faces was replicated In Experiment 2, the effect was not disrupted with inversion, and an efficiency advantage emerged, suggesting that perceptual features could be causing the advantage In Experiment 3, speed and efficiency effects were seen when this perceptual characteristic remained but face features were scrambled Taken together, these findings suggest that visual search using schematic faces containing a curved-line mouth feature cannot provide a valid test of guided search by negative facial emotion unless this confound is controlled.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=79956081656&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/02699931.2010.500159
DO - 10.1080/02699931.2010.500159
M3 - Article
C2 - 21547761
AN - SCOPUS:79956081656
SN - 0269-9931
VL - 25
SP - 573
EP - 584
JO - Cognition and Emotion
JF - Cognition and Emotion
IS - 4
ER -