P2-22: Aging Effects on the Visual Scanning of Emotional Faces

This study investigated the effect of aging on the accuracy of response, reaction time, and visual scanning strategy, while emotional faces were viewed. Forty-three neurologically healthy participants were assigned to either a young, middle, or older-aged group. Overall, older adults were significan...

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Main Authors: Suzane Vassallo, Zanobia Ujjainwala, Jacinta M Douglas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2012-10-01
Series:i-Perception
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1068/if681
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spelling doaj-684cc02f71a44c608f911a5cf963af1b2020-11-25T04:01:00ZengSAGE Publishingi-Perception2041-66952012-10-01310.1068/if68110.1068_if681P2-22: Aging Effects on the Visual Scanning of Emotional FacesSuzane Vassallo0Zanobia UjjainwalaJacinta M DouglasLa Trobe University, AustraliaThis study investigated the effect of aging on the accuracy of response, reaction time, and visual scanning strategy, while emotional faces were viewed. Forty-three neurologically healthy participants were assigned to either a young, middle, or older-aged group. Overall, older adults were significantly less accurate in recognising facial expressions, especially those demonstrating negative emotions. Further, the young and middle-aged adults took significantly less time to recognise an emotional face than the older adults. When assessing eye movements, it was noted that the older group generated a significantly greater number of fixations to the faces and spent more time overall in looking at the various facial features. Regardless of the emotional expression and participant age, all participants looked more frequently and for longer at the eye region; this was then followed by the nose and then mouth. The findings from this work support the existence of an age-related decline in emotion recognition. However, this study is the first to document reaction time differences in identifying facial affect across three different age groups. The eyes are the most important facial feature when identifying an emotional face, and this holds true across the age ranges investigated in this work. In essence, when looking at emotional faces, middle and older-aged adults demonstrate a similar scanning pattern compared to their younger counterparts–they just take longer to do so. Therefore, the normal age-related decline in recognising facial affect appears not due to impairment in the way the eyes move to look at faces.https://doi.org/10.1068/if681
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Suzane Vassallo
Zanobia Ujjainwala
Jacinta M Douglas
spellingShingle Suzane Vassallo
Zanobia Ujjainwala
Jacinta M Douglas
P2-22: Aging Effects on the Visual Scanning of Emotional Faces
i-Perception
author_facet Suzane Vassallo
Zanobia Ujjainwala
Jacinta M Douglas
author_sort Suzane Vassallo
title P2-22: Aging Effects on the Visual Scanning of Emotional Faces
title_short P2-22: Aging Effects on the Visual Scanning of Emotional Faces
title_full P2-22: Aging Effects on the Visual Scanning of Emotional Faces
title_fullStr P2-22: Aging Effects on the Visual Scanning of Emotional Faces
title_full_unstemmed P2-22: Aging Effects on the Visual Scanning of Emotional Faces
title_sort p2-22: aging effects on the visual scanning of emotional faces
publisher SAGE Publishing
series i-Perception
issn 2041-6695
publishDate 2012-10-01
description This study investigated the effect of aging on the accuracy of response, reaction time, and visual scanning strategy, while emotional faces were viewed. Forty-three neurologically healthy participants were assigned to either a young, middle, or older-aged group. Overall, older adults were significantly less accurate in recognising facial expressions, especially those demonstrating negative emotions. Further, the young and middle-aged adults took significantly less time to recognise an emotional face than the older adults. When assessing eye movements, it was noted that the older group generated a significantly greater number of fixations to the faces and spent more time overall in looking at the various facial features. Regardless of the emotional expression and participant age, all participants looked more frequently and for longer at the eye region; this was then followed by the nose and then mouth. The findings from this work support the existence of an age-related decline in emotion recognition. However, this study is the first to document reaction time differences in identifying facial affect across three different age groups. The eyes are the most important facial feature when identifying an emotional face, and this holds true across the age ranges investigated in this work. In essence, when looking at emotional faces, middle and older-aged adults demonstrate a similar scanning pattern compared to their younger counterparts–they just take longer to do so. Therefore, the normal age-related decline in recognising facial affect appears not due to impairment in the way the eyes move to look at faces.
url https://doi.org/10.1068/if681
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