Face puzzle-two new video-based tasks for measuring explicit and implicit aspects of facial emotion recognition

Recognizing others' emotional states is crucial for effective social interaction. While most facial emotion recognition tasks use explicit prompts that trigger consciously controlled processing, emotional faces are almost exclusively processed implicitly in real life. Recent attempts in social...

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Main Authors: Kliemann, D., Rosenblau, G., Bolte, Sven, Heekeren, H., Dziobek, I.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Frontiers Research Foundation 2013
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/59562
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author Kliemann, D.
Rosenblau, G.
Bolte, Sven
Heekeren, H.
Dziobek, I.
author_facet Kliemann, D.
Rosenblau, G.
Bolte, Sven
Heekeren, H.
Dziobek, I.
author_sort Kliemann, D.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Recognizing others' emotional states is crucial for effective social interaction. While most facial emotion recognition tasks use explicit prompts that trigger consciously controlled processing, emotional faces are almost exclusively processed implicitly in real life. Recent attempts in social cognition suggest a dual process perspective, whereby explicit and implicit processes largely operate independently. However, due to differences in methodology the direct comparison of implicit and explicit social cognition has remained a challenge. Here, we introduce a new tool to comparably measure implicit and explicit processing aspects comprising basic and complex emotions in facial expressions. We developed two video-based tasks with similar answer formats to assess performance in respective facial emotion recognition processes: Face Puzzle, implicit and explicit. To assess the tasks' sensitivity to atypical social cognition and to infer interrelationship patterns between explicit and implicit processes in typical and atypical development, we included healthy adults (NT, n = 24) and adults with autism spectrum disorder (ASD, n = 24). Item analyses yielded good reliability of the new tasks. Group-specific results indic ated sensitivity to subtle social impairments in high-functioning ASD. Correlation analyses with established implicit and explicit socio-cognitive measures were further in favor of the tasks' external validity. Between group comparisons provide first hints of differential relations between implicit and explicit aspects of facial emotion recognition processes in healthy compared to ASD participants. In addition, an increased magnitude of between group differences in the implicit task was found for a speed-accuracy composite measure. The new Face Puzzle tool thus provides two new tasks to separately assess explicit and implicit social functioning, for instance, to measure subtle impairments as well as potential improvements due to social cognitive interventions.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-595622018-03-15T03:15:02Z Face puzzle-two new video-based tasks for measuring explicit and implicit aspects of facial emotion recognition Kliemann, D. Rosenblau, G. Bolte, Sven Heekeren, H. Dziobek, I. Recognizing others' emotional states is crucial for effective social interaction. While most facial emotion recognition tasks use explicit prompts that trigger consciously controlled processing, emotional faces are almost exclusively processed implicitly in real life. Recent attempts in social cognition suggest a dual process perspective, whereby explicit and implicit processes largely operate independently. However, due to differences in methodology the direct comparison of implicit and explicit social cognition has remained a challenge. Here, we introduce a new tool to comparably measure implicit and explicit processing aspects comprising basic and complex emotions in facial expressions. We developed two video-based tasks with similar answer formats to assess performance in respective facial emotion recognition processes: Face Puzzle, implicit and explicit. To assess the tasks' sensitivity to atypical social cognition and to infer interrelationship patterns between explicit and implicit processes in typical and atypical development, we included healthy adults (NT, n = 24) and adults with autism spectrum disorder (ASD, n = 24). Item analyses yielded good reliability of the new tasks. Group-specific results indic ated sensitivity to subtle social impairments in high-functioning ASD. Correlation analyses with established implicit and explicit socio-cognitive measures were further in favor of the tasks' external validity. Between group comparisons provide first hints of differential relations between implicit and explicit aspects of facial emotion recognition processes in healthy compared to ASD participants. In addition, an increased magnitude of between group differences in the implicit task was found for a speed-accuracy composite measure. The new Face Puzzle tool thus provides two new tasks to separately assess explicit and implicit social functioning, for instance, to measure subtle impairments as well as potential improvements due to social cognitive interventions. 2013 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/59562 10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00376 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ Frontiers Research Foundation unknown
spellingShingle Kliemann, D.
Rosenblau, G.
Bolte, Sven
Heekeren, H.
Dziobek, I.
Face puzzle-two new video-based tasks for measuring explicit and implicit aspects of facial emotion recognition
title Face puzzle-two new video-based tasks for measuring explicit and implicit aspects of facial emotion recognition
title_full Face puzzle-two new video-based tasks for measuring explicit and implicit aspects of facial emotion recognition
title_fullStr Face puzzle-two new video-based tasks for measuring explicit and implicit aspects of facial emotion recognition
title_full_unstemmed Face puzzle-two new video-based tasks for measuring explicit and implicit aspects of facial emotion recognition
title_short Face puzzle-two new video-based tasks for measuring explicit and implicit aspects of facial emotion recognition
title_sort face puzzle-two new video-based tasks for measuring explicit and implicit aspects of facial emotion recognition
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/59562