Motion's privilege in recognizing facial expressions following treatment for blindness.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_C6B033C2E828
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Motion's privilege in recognizing facial expressions following treatment for blindness.
Journal
Current biology
Author(s)
Gilad-Gutnick S., Kurian G.S., Gupta P., Shah P., Tiwari K., Ralekar C., Gandhi T., Ganesh S., Mathur U., Sinha P.
ISSN
1879-0445 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0960-9822
Publication state
Published
Issued date
09/09/2024
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
34
Number
17
Pages
4047-4055.e3
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
In his 1872 monograph, Charles Darwin posited that "… the habit of expressing our feelings by certain movements, though now rendered innate, had been in some manner gradually acquired." <sup>1</sup> Nearly 150 years later, researchers are still teasing apart innate versus experience-dependent contributions to expression recognition. Indeed, studies have shown that face detection is surprisingly resilient to early visual deprivation, <sup>2</sup> <sup>,</sup> <sup>3</sup> <sup>,</sup> <sup>4</sup> <sup>,</sup> <sup>5</sup> pointing to plasticity that extends beyond dogmatic critical periods. <sup>6</sup> <sup>,</sup> <sup>7</sup> <sup>,</sup> <sup>8</sup> However, it remains unclear whether such resilience extends to downstream processing, such as the ability to recognize facial expressions. The extent to which innate versus experience-dependent mechanisms contribute to this ability has yet to be fully explored. <sup>9</sup> <sup>,</sup> <sup>10</sup> <sup>,</sup> <sup>11</sup> <sup>,</sup> <sup>12</sup> <sup>,</sup> <sup>13</sup> To investigate the impact of early visual experience on facial-expression recognition, we studied children with congenital cataracts who have undergone sight-correcting treatment <sup>14</sup> <sup>,</sup> <sup>15</sup> and tracked their longitudinal skill acquisition as they gain sight late in life. We introduce and explore two potential facilitators of late-life plasticity: the availability of newborn-like coarse visual acuity prior to treatment <sup>16</sup> and the privileged role of motion following treatment. <sup>4</sup> <sup>,</sup> <sup>17</sup> <sup>,</sup> <sup>18</sup> We find that early visual deprivation does not preclude partial acquisition of facial-expression recognition. While rudimentary pretreatment vision is sufficient to allow a low level of expression recognition, it does not facilitate post-treatment improvements. Additionally, only children commencing vision with high visual acuity privilege the use of dynamic cues. We conclude that skipping typical visual experience early in development and introducing high-resolution imagery late in development restricts, but does not preclude, facial-expression skill acquisition and that the representational mechanisms driving this learning differ from those that emerge during typical visual development.
Keywords
Humans, Facial Expression, Blindness/physiopathology, Child, Male, Female, Adolescent, Facial Recognition/physiology, Child, Preschool, Visual Acuity/physiology, cataract reversal, dynamic face recognition, early blind, facial expression recognition, late sight onset, visual plasticity
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
16/08/2024 14:27
Last modification date
02/11/2024 7:10
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