On 2016 Dec 08, Lydia Maniatis commented:
Part 2: 2. The terms “adaptation” and “aftereffects.” There is no way to discern the meaning of these terms in the context of this study. The authors seem to be using the term very loosely: “….many aspects of visual perception are adaptive, such that the appearance of a given stimulus may be affected by what has been seen before.” The example they give involves motion aftereffects, the cause of which, as far as I can discover, is still unknown. Continuing, they declare that “This perceptual bias is known as an aftereffect [last term italicized].”
This exposition conflates all possible effects of experience on subsequent perceptual impressions with the color aftereffects based on color opponency at the retinal level, and with the less well-understood motion aftereffects. In other words, we’re lumping together the phenomenon known as “perceptual set,” for example, with color aftereffects, as well as with motion aftereffects. In these latter cases, at least, it is intelligible to talk about aftereffects as being “opposite” to the original effects. In the case of motion, we are fairly straightforwardly talking about a percept of a motion in the opposite direction. In the case of color, the situation is not based on percepts having perceptually opposing characteristics; what makes green the opposite of red is more physiological then perceptual. So even with respect to what the authors refer to as “low-level” effects, ‘opposite’ means rather different things.
The vagueness of the ‘opposite’ concept as used by Burton et al (2016) is expressed in their placement of quotation marks around the term: “In the facial expression aftereffect, adaptation to a face with a particular expression will bias participants’ judgments of subsequent faces towards the “opposite” expression: The expression with visual characteristics opposite those of the adaptor, relative to the central tendency of expressions.”
All of the unexamined theoretical assumptions implicit in the terms ‘visual characteristics,’ ‘adaptor’ ‘central tendency’ and, therefore, ‘opposite’ are embedded in the uncritically-adopted procedure of Tiddeman et al (2001). While the example the authors give – “Where fear has raised eyebrows and an open mouth, anti-fear has lowered eyebrows and a closed mouth, and so on” may seem straightforward, neither it nor the procedure is as straightforward as we might assume. The devil is in the “and so on.” First, “lowered eyebrows” is a relative term; lowered in relation to what? Different faces have different relationships between eyebrows, eyes, nose, hairline, etc. And a closed mouth is a very general state. Second, this discrete, if vague, description doesn’t directly reference the technical procedure developed by Tiddeman et al (2001). When we are told by Burton et al (2016) that “anti-expressions were created by morphing along a trajectory that ran from one of the identity-neutral faces [they look like nothing?] through the average expression and beyond it to a point that differed from the average to the same extent as the original expression,” we have absolutely no way to interpret this without examining the assumptions and mathematics utilized by Tiddeman et al (2001). On a conceptual and practical level, readers and authors are blind as to the theoretical significance of this manipulation and the description of its products in terms of “opposites.”
In addition, there is no way to distinguish the authors’ description of adaptation from any possible effect of previous experience, e.g. to distinguish it from the previously-mentioned concept of “perceptual set,” or from the fact that we perceive things in relative terms; a baby tiger cub, for example, evokes an impression of smallness while a smaller but fully-grown cat large for its size might evoke the impression of largeness. Someone used to being around short people might find average-height people tall, and vice versa. Should we lump this with color, motion aftereffects and perceptual set effects? Maybe we should, but we need to make the case, we need a rationale.
Implications The authors say that their results indicate that “expression aftereffects” may have a significant impact on day-to-day expression perception, but given that they needed to train their observers to deliver adequate results, and given the very particular conditions that they chose (without explanation), this is not particularly convincing. Questions about the specifics of the design are always relevant in this type of studies, where stimuli are very briefly presented. Why, for example, did Burton et al (2016) use a 150 millisecond ISI, versus the 500 millisecond ISI used by Skinner and Benton (2010). With such tight conditions, such decisions can obviously influence results, so it’s important to rationalize them in the context of theory.
It should be obvious already, but the following statement, taken from the General discussion, is an apt demonstration of the general intellectual vagueness of the article: “Face aftereffects are often used to examine the visual representation of faces, with the assumption that these aftereffects tap the mechanisms of visual perception in the same way as lower level visual aftereffects.”
The phrase “in the same way…” is wholly without a referent; we don’t even know what level of analysis is being referred to. In the same way as (retinally-mediated, as far as we understand) color aftereffects? In the same (physiologically not well understood) way as motion aftereffects?” In the same way as the effects of perceptual set? In the same way as seeing size, or shape, or color, etc, in relative terms? What way is “the same way”?
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