Fixed or flexible? Orientation preference in identity and gaze processing in humans.

Vision begins with the encoding of contrast at specific orientations. Several works showed that humans identify their conspecifics best based on the horizontally-oriented information contained in the face image; this range conveys the main morphological features of the face. In contrast, the vertica...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Valérie Goffaux
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0210503
id doaj-0330fe87984e40019e2022855588f870
record_format Article
spelling doaj-0330fe87984e40019e2022855588f8702021-03-03T20:56:40ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-01141e021050310.1371/journal.pone.0210503Fixed or flexible? Orientation preference in identity and gaze processing in humans.Valérie GoffauxVision begins with the encoding of contrast at specific orientations. Several works showed that humans identify their conspecifics best based on the horizontally-oriented information contained in the face image; this range conveys the main morphological features of the face. In contrast, the vertical structure of the eye region seems to deliver optimal cues to gaze direction. The present work investigates whether the human face processing system flexibly tunes to vertical information contained in the eye region when processing gaze direction. Alternatively, face processing may invariantly rely on the horizontal range, supporting the domain specificity of orientation tuning for faces and the gateway role of horizontal content to access any type of facial information. Participants judged the gaze direction of faces staring at a range of lateral positions. They additionally performed an identification task with upright and inverted face stimuli. Across tasks, stimuli were filtered to selectively reveal horizontal (H), vertical (V), or combined (HV) information. Most participants identified faces better based on horizontal than vertical information confirming the horizontal tuning of face identification. In contrast, they showed a vertically-tuned sensitivity to gaze direction. The logistic functions fitting the "left" and "right" response proportion as a function of gaze direction were indeed steeper when based on vertical than on horizontal information. The finding of a vertically-tuned processing of gaze direction favours the hypothesis that visual encoding of face information flexibly switches to the orientation channel carrying the cues most relevant to the task at hand. It suggests that horizontal structure, though predominant in the face stimulus, is not a mandatory gateway for efficient face processing. The present evidence may help better understand how visual signals travel the visual system to enable rich and complex representations of naturalistic stimuli such as faces.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0210503
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Valérie Goffaux
spellingShingle Valérie Goffaux
Fixed or flexible? Orientation preference in identity and gaze processing in humans.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Valérie Goffaux
author_sort Valérie Goffaux
title Fixed or flexible? Orientation preference in identity and gaze processing in humans.
title_short Fixed or flexible? Orientation preference in identity and gaze processing in humans.
title_full Fixed or flexible? Orientation preference in identity and gaze processing in humans.
title_fullStr Fixed or flexible? Orientation preference in identity and gaze processing in humans.
title_full_unstemmed Fixed or flexible? Orientation preference in identity and gaze processing in humans.
title_sort fixed or flexible? orientation preference in identity and gaze processing in humans.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Vision begins with the encoding of contrast at specific orientations. Several works showed that humans identify their conspecifics best based on the horizontally-oriented information contained in the face image; this range conveys the main morphological features of the face. In contrast, the vertical structure of the eye region seems to deliver optimal cues to gaze direction. The present work investigates whether the human face processing system flexibly tunes to vertical information contained in the eye region when processing gaze direction. Alternatively, face processing may invariantly rely on the horizontal range, supporting the domain specificity of orientation tuning for faces and the gateway role of horizontal content to access any type of facial information. Participants judged the gaze direction of faces staring at a range of lateral positions. They additionally performed an identification task with upright and inverted face stimuli. Across tasks, stimuli were filtered to selectively reveal horizontal (H), vertical (V), or combined (HV) information. Most participants identified faces better based on horizontal than vertical information confirming the horizontal tuning of face identification. In contrast, they showed a vertically-tuned sensitivity to gaze direction. The logistic functions fitting the "left" and "right" response proportion as a function of gaze direction were indeed steeper when based on vertical than on horizontal information. The finding of a vertically-tuned processing of gaze direction favours the hypothesis that visual encoding of face information flexibly switches to the orientation channel carrying the cues most relevant to the task at hand. It suggests that horizontal structure, though predominant in the face stimulus, is not a mandatory gateway for efficient face processing. The present evidence may help better understand how visual signals travel the visual system to enable rich and complex representations of naturalistic stimuli such as faces.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0210503
work_keys_str_mv AT valeriegoffaux fixedorflexibleorientationpreferenceinidentityandgazeprocessinginhumans
_version_ 1714819597343916032