Volume 3, Number 1, Article 7, Pages 64-74 doi:10.1167/3.1.7 http://journalofvision.org/3/1/7/ ISSN 1534-7362
Change detection in an attended face depends on the expectation of the observer
Erin L. Austen
Psychology, University of British Columbia,Vancouver, Canada
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James T. Enns
Psychology, University of British Columbia,Vancouver, Canada
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Abstract

Sensitivity to a scene change during a brief interruption depends critically on a match between what the observer expects to see and the kind of change that occurs (Austen & Enns, 2000). The present study tested the generality of this conclusion using human faces, which are both socially more relevant and perceptually more configural than the compound letters tested previously. An experiment using the flicker technique examined sensitivity to two types of change: facial identity and emotional expression. Change detection was assessed when attention was either focused or distributed, the change was either expected or unexpected, and the faces were either upright or inverted. The main finding was that detection was expectation-dependent, even when only a single upright face was presented. Secondary findings with regard to attentional distribution and face inversion confirmed that observers were indeed engaged in face processing. We conclude that observer expectations critically influence the perception of single and fully attended human faces.

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History
Received March 8, 2002; published February 6, 2003
Citation
Austen, E. L., & Enns, J. T. (2003). Change detection in an attended face depends on the expectation of the observer. Journal of Vision, 3(1):7, 64-74, http://journalofvision.org/3/1/7/, doi:10.1167/3.1.7.
Keywords
change detection, observer-expectation, perception, visual representation, focused attention, divided attention, visual search, human face processing
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