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首页> 外文期刊>Frontiers in Psychology >The Frozen Face Effect: Why Static Photographs May Not Do You Justice
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The Frozen Face Effect: Why Static Photographs May Not Do You Justice

机译:冰冷的脸部效果:为什么静态照片无法使您公正

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When a video of someone speaking is paused, the stationary image of the speaker typically appears less flattering than the video, which contained motion. We call this the frozen face effect (FFE). Here we report six experiments intended to quantify this effect and determine its cause. In Experiment 1, video clips of people speaking in naturalistic settings as well as all of the static frames that composed each video were presented, and subjects rated how flattering each stimulus was. The videos were rated to be significantly more flattering than the static images, confirming the FFE. In Experiment 2, videos and static images were inverted, and the videos were again rated as more flattering than the static images. In Experiment 3, a discrimination task measured recognition of the static images that composed each video. Recognition did not correlate with flattery ratings, suggesting that the FFE is not due to better memory for particularly distinct images. In Experiment 4, flattery ratings for groups of static images were compared with those for videos and static images. Ratings for the video stimuli were higher than those for either the group or individual static stimuli, suggesting that the amount of information available is not what produces the FFE. In Experiment 5, videos were presented under four conditions: forward motion, inverted forward motion, reversed motion, and scrambled frame sequence. Flattery ratings for the scrambled videos were significantly lower than those for the other three conditions. In Experiment 6, as in Experiment 2, inverted videos and static images were compared with upright ones, and the response measure was changed to perceived attractiveness. Videos were rated as more attractive than the static images for both upright and inverted stimuli. Overall, the results suggest that the FFE requires continuous, natural motion of faces, is not sensitive to inversion, and is not due to a memory effect.
机译:当某人讲话的视频暂停时,说话者的静止图像通常看起来不如包含运动的视频那么讨人喜欢。我们称其为冻结脸效应(FFE)。在这里,我们报告了六个实验,旨在量化此影响并确定其原因。在实验1中,展示了人们在自然环境中讲话的视频片段以及组成每个视频的所有静态帧,并且受试者对每种刺激的吸引力进行了评价。视频被认为比静态图像更讨人喜欢,这证明了FFE。在实验2中,视频和静态图像被颠倒了,并且视频再次被评为比静态图像更讨人喜欢。在实验3中,判别任务测量了组成每个视频的静态图像的识别。识别与奉承评价不相关,表明FFE不是由于对特别清晰的图像有更好的记忆。在实验4中,将静态图片组的奉承评价与视频和静态图片的奉承评价进行了比较。视频刺激的评分高于小组或单个静态刺激的评分,这表明可用信息量不是产生FFE的原因。在实验5中,视频是在四种情况下呈现的:向前运动,反向向前运动,反向运动和加扰的帧序列。加密视频的奉承评价明显低于其他三个条件。在实验6中,与在实验2中一样,将倒置视频和静态图像与直立视频和静态图像进行了比较,并将响应方式更改为感知的吸引力。对于直立和倒立刺激,视频均被评为比静态图像更具吸引力。总体而言,结果表明,FFE需要连续,自然地运动面部,对倒置不敏感,也不是由于记忆效应。

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