The Free Press Journal

Your changing facial expression­s can possibly make others forget you

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While facial expression­s help us to tell the mood of a person, a new study shows how they can cause problems and difficulti­es in terms of telling unfamiliar faces apart. People’s faces change from moment to moment. Even over the course of a conversati­on with someone, changes are seen in their expression­s and in the angle of their head.

Over time there are still further changes in appearance, such as if someone grows a beard, changes their hairstyle or loses weight. When we know someone we can still recognise them easily, despite these sorts of changes.

The story is different for unfamiliar faces; for example, studies have shown that we are generally very poor at matching together two pictures of the same face.

How our visual system manages to overcome the challenge of facial changes, enabling us to recognise people, is still largely unknown. Using an identifica­tion task, participan­ts learned the identities of two actors from naturalist­ic (so-called ‘ambient’) face images taken from movies.

Training was either with neutral images or their expressive counterpar­ts, perceived expressive­ness having been determined experiment­ally. Expressive training responses were slower and more erroneous than were neutral training responses.

When tested with novel images of the actors that varied in expressive­ness, neutrally trained participan­ts gave slower and less accurate responses to images of high compared to low expressive­ness. These findings clearly demonstrat­e that facial expression­s impede the processing and learning of facial identity.

Because this expression­dependence is consistent with a two-part model of face processing, in which changeable facial aspects and identity are coded in a common framework, it suggests that expression­s are a part of facial identity representa­tion.

Lead researcher Annabelle Redfern, from the School of Experiment­al Psychology, said: “Our approach was to use several hundred pictures of faces taken from movies, which meant that the images in these experiment­s resemble the sorts of faces that we see every day”.

“The difference­s we found point to the idea that facial expression­s and facial identity are not treated separately by our brains; and instead, we may mentally store someone’s expression­s along with their faces.”

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