Fearful faces are believed to be prioritized in visual perception. However, it is unclear whether the processing of low-level facial features alone can facilitate such prioritization or whether higher-levelmechanisms also contribute. We examined potential biases for fearful face perception at the levels of perceptual decision-making and perceptual confidence. We controlled for lower-level visual processing capacity by titrating luminance contrasts of backward masks, and the emotional intensity of fearful, angry and happy faces. Under these conditions, participants showed liberal biases in perceiving a fearful face, in both detection and discrimination tasks. This effect was stronger among individuals with reduced density in dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, a region linked to perceptual decision-making. Moreover, participants reported higher confidence when they accurately perceived a fearful face, suggesting that fearful facesmay have privileged access to consciousness. Together, the results suggest that mechanisms in the prefrontal cortex contribute tomaking fearful face perception special.
CITATION STYLE
Koizumi, A., Mobbs, D., & Lau, H. (2016). Is fear perception special? Evidence at the level of decision-making and subjective confidence. Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, 11(11), 1772–1782. https://doi.org/10.1093/scan/nsw084
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