2008
DOI: 10.3758/brm.40.1.109
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Facial expressions of emotion (KDEF): Identification under different display-duration conditions

Abstract: Participants judged which of seven facial expressions (neutrality, happiness, anger, sadness, surprise, fear, and disgust) were displayed by a set of 280 faces corresponding to 20 female and 20 male models of the Karolinska Directed Emotional Faces database (Lundqvist, Flykt, & Ohman, 1998). Each face was presented under free-viewing conditions (to 63 participants) and also for 25, 50, 100, 250, and 500 msec (to 160 participants), to examine identification thresholds. Measures of identification accuracy, types… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1
1

Citation Types

60
320
5
11

Year Published

2010
2010
2023
2023

Publication Types

Select...
10

Relationship

1
9

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 408 publications
(396 citation statements)
references
References 19 publications
60
320
5
11
Order By: Relevance
“…Using an intact/smeared face decision task, a previous study reported a similar effect, with more negative amplitudes for happy than neutral (and angry) faces at occipito-parietal sites during a 128-144ms windows, which corresponded to the transition between P1 and N170 (Schacht & Sommer, 2009). These results suggest possibly faster processing of happy than fearful expressions (the latter starting around the N170 or later, as discussed next), which is in line with behavioural reports of faster discrimination of happy faces compared to the other basic emotions (e.g., Calvo & Lundqvist, 2008;Palermo & Colheart, 2004;Tottenham et al, 2009). …”
Section: Early and Later "Happiness Effects" And Importance Of The Mouthsupporting
confidence: 75%
“…Using an intact/smeared face decision task, a previous study reported a similar effect, with more negative amplitudes for happy than neutral (and angry) faces at occipito-parietal sites during a 128-144ms windows, which corresponded to the transition between P1 and N170 (Schacht & Sommer, 2009). These results suggest possibly faster processing of happy than fearful expressions (the latter starting around the N170 or later, as discussed next), which is in line with behavioural reports of faster discrimination of happy faces compared to the other basic emotions (e.g., Calvo & Lundqvist, 2008;Palermo & Colheart, 2004;Tottenham et al, 2009). …”
Section: Early and Later "Happiness Effects" And Importance Of The Mouthsupporting
confidence: 75%
“…These included seven independent studies comprising 381 research participants (71 females). The average number of participants per study was 54; two studies used The Pictures of Facial Affect Database (Ekman and Friesen, 1976), three used images from the Karolinska Directed Emotional Faces (Calvo and Lundqvist, 2008) series, another used the Dynamic Affect Recognition Evaluation (DARE) from the Cohn-Kanade database, and the remaining study using another validated stimulus set, the FACES database containing facial expressions of younger, middle-aged, and older women and men (Ebner et al, 2010).…”
Section: Search Methods For Identification Of Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, so far this database does not comprise a full cross-classification of facial expressions and individual faces, in the sense that each face is represented with each of several different facial expressions. Other existing databases cover various facial expressions for each individual face (see, e.g., Calvo & Lundqvist, 2008;Palermo & Coltheart, 2004). Examples are the Pictures of Facial Affect (PoFA; Ekman & Friesen, 1976), the Karolinska Directed Emotional Faces System (Lundqvist, Flykt, & Öhman, 1998), the Yale Face Database (n.d.), and the Psychological Image Collection at Stirling (University of Stirling Psychology Department, n.d.).…”
Section: P Smentioning
confidence: 99%