Our brains are able to judge the trustworthiness of a face even when we cannot consciously see it, a team of scientists has found. Their findings shed new light on how we form snap judgments of others.
Our brains are able to judge the trustworthiness of a face even when we cannot consciously see it, a team of scientists has found. Their findings, which appear in the Journal of Neuroscience, shed new light on how we form snap judgments of others.
"Our findings suggest that the brain automatically responds to a face's trustworthiness before it is even consciously perceived," explains Jonathan Freeman, an assistant professor in New York University's Department of Psychology and the study's senior author.
"The results are consistent with an extensive body of research suggesting that we form spontaneous judgments of other people that can be largely outside awareness," adds Freeman, who conducted the study as a faculty member at Dartmouth College.
The study's other authors included Ryan Stolier, an NYU doctoral candidate, Zachary Ingbretsen, a research scientist who previously worked with Freeman and is now at Harvard University, and Eric Hehman, a post-doctoral researcher at NYU.
The researchers focused on the workings of the brain's amygdala, a structure that is important for humans' social and emotional behavior. Previous studies have shown this structure to be active in judging the trustworthiness of faces. However, it had not been known if the amygdala is capable of responding to a complex social signal like a face's trustworthiness without that signal reaching perceptual awareness.
To gauge this part of the brain's role in making such assessments, the study's authors conducted a pair of experiments in which they monitored the activity of subjects' amygdala while the subjects were exposed to a series of facial images.
These images included both standardized photographs of actual strangers' faces as well as artificially generated faces whose trustworthiness cues could be manipulated while all other facial cues were controlled. The artificially generated faces were computer synthesized based on previous research showing that cues such as higher inner eyebrows and pronounced cheekbones are seen as trustworthy and lower inner eyebrows and shallower cheekbones are seen as untrustworthy.
Prior to the start of these experiments, a separate group of subjects examined all the real and computer-generated faces and rated how trustworthy or untrustworthy they appeared. As previous studies have shown, subjects strongly agreed on the level of trustworthiness conveyed by each given face.
In the experiments, a new set of subjects viewed these same faces inside a brain scanner, but were exposed to the faces very briefly -- for only a matter of milliseconds. This rapid exposure, together with another feature known as "backward masking," prevented subjects from consciously seeing the faces. Backward masking works by presenting subjects with an irrelevant "mask" image that immediately follows an extremely brief exposure to a face, which is thought to terminate the brain's ability to further process the face and prevent it from reaching awareness. In the first experiment, the researchers examined amygdala activity in response to three levels of a face's trustworthiness: low, medium, and high. In the second experiment, they assessed amygdala activity in response to a fully continuous spectrum of trustworthiness.
Across the two experiments, the researchers found that specific regions inside the amygdala exhibited activity tracking how untrustworthy a face appeared, and other regions inside the amygdala exhibited activity tracking the overall strength of the trustworthiness signal (whether untrustworthy or trustworthy) -- even though subjects could not consciously see any of the faces.
"These findings provide evidence that the amygdala's processing of social cues in the absence of awareness may be more extensive than previously understood," observes Freeman. "The amygdala is able to assess how trustworthy another person's face appears without it being consciously perceived."
GMT 17:42 2018 Wednesday ,31 October
Launch of cargo spacecraft Progress MS-10 to ISS set for 16 NovemberGMT 14:18 2018 Saturday ,27 October
First launch of Soyuz-FG booster after Oct 11 incident scheduled on 16 NovGMT 16:58 2018 Monday ,22 October
Report on Soyuz-FG vehicle malfunction to be approved on 30 OctoberGMT 22:05 2018 Friday ,19 October
NASA chief believes human mission to Mars should become international projectGMT 16:31 2018 Monday ,15 October
Roscosmos chief to inform NASA and ESA on probe into Soyuz booster incidentGMT 18:09 2018 Thursday ,11 October
Russia to provide NASA with full information on Soyuz emergency landingGMT 16:09 2018 Thursday ,11 October
President Putin to receive report on aborted Soyuz space launch to ISSGMT 10:49 2018 Friday ,19 January
Amazon narrows list of 'HQ2' candidates to 20Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Send your comments
Your comment as a visitor