Facial expression and selective attention
- 1 May 2002
- journal article
- neuropsychiatry
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Current Opinion in Psychiatry
- Vol. 15 (3) , 291-300
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00001504-200205000-00011
Abstract
Recent findings demonstrate that faces with an emotional expression tend to attract attention more than neutral faces, especially when having some threat-related value (anger or fear). These findings suggest that discrimination of emotional cues in faces can at least partly be extracted at preattentive or unconscious stages of processing, and then serve to enhance awareness and behavioural responses toward emotionally relevant stimuli. Functional neuroimaging results have begun to delineate brain regions whose response to threat-related expressions is independent of voluntary attention (e.g. amygdala and orbitofrontal cortex), and other regions whose response occurs only with attention (e.g. superior temporal and anterior cingulate cortex). Moreover, visual responses in the fusiform cortex are enhanced for emotional faces, consistent with their greater perceptual saliency. Recent data from event-related evoked potentials and neurophysiology also suggest that rapid processing of emotional information may not only occur in parallel to, but promote a more detailed perceptual analysis of, sensory inputs and thus bias competition for attention toward the representation of emotionally salient stimuli.This publication has 80 references indexed in Scilit:
- The neural basis of biased competition in human visual cortexPublished by Elsevier ,2001
- Differential attentional guidance by unattended faces expressing positive and negative emotionPerception & Psychophysics, 2001
- DETECTION OF FACIAL EXPRESSIONS OF EMOTIONS IN DEPRESSIONPublished by SAGE Publications ,2001
- Perception without awareness: perspectives from cognitive psychologyCognition, 2001
- Changing Faces: A Detection Advantage in the Flicker ParadigmPsychological Science, 2001
- Two eyes make a pair: facial organization and perceptual learning reduce visual extinctionNeuropsychologia, 2001
- The face in the crowd revisited: A threat advantage with schematic stimuli.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 2001
- Faces call for attention: evidence from patients with visual extinctionNeuropsychologia, 2000
- RESPONSE PROPERTIES OF THE HUMAN FUSIFORM FACE AREACognitive Neuropsychology, 2000
- Facial Expressions of Emotion: Are Angry Faces Detected More Efficiently?Cognition and Emotion, 2000