Quantifying Human Sensitivity to Spatio-Temporal Information in Dynamic Faces

K Dobs1, I Bülthoff1, M Breidt1, Q C Vuong2, C Curio1, J W Schultz3

1Human Perception, Cognition and Action, MPI for Biological Cybernetics, Germany
2Institute of Neuroscience, Newcastle University, United Kingdom
3Department of Psychology, Durham University, United Kingdom

Contact: katharina.dobs@tuebingen.mpg.de

A great deal of social information is conveyed by facial motion. However, understanding how observers use the natural timing and intensity information conveyed by facial motion is difficult because of the complexity of these motion cues. Here, we systematically manipulated animations of facial expressions to investigate observers’ sensitivity to changes in facial motion. We filmed and motion-captured four facial expressions and decomposed each expression into time courses of semantically meaningful local facial actions (e.g., eyebrow raise). These time courses were used to animate a 3D head model with either the original time courses or approximations of them. We then tested observers’ perceptual sensitivity to these changes using matching-to-sample tasks. When viewing two animations (original vs. approximation), observers chose original animations as most similar to the video of the expression. In a second experiment, we used several measures of stimulus similarity to explain observers’ choice of which approximation was most similar to the original animation when viewing two different approximations. We found that high-level cues about spatio-temporal characteristics of facial motion (e.g., onset and peak of eyebrow raise) best explained observers’ choices. Our results demonstrate the usefulness of our method; and importantly, they reveal observers’ sensitivity to natural facial dynamics.

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