Recognition and Misclassification Patterns of Basic Emotional Facial Expressions: An Eye-Tracking Study in Young Healthy Adults

dc.contributor.author Alkan, Neşe
dc.contributor.other 01. Atılım University
dc.contributor.other 02. School of Arts and Sciences
dc.contributor.other Department of Psychology
dc.date.accessioned 2025-11-07T10:53:33Z
dc.date.available 2025-11-07T10:53:33Z
dc.date.issued 2025
dc.description.abstract Accurate recognition of basic facial emotions is well documented, yet the mechanisms of misclassification and their relation to gaze allocation remain under-reported. The present study utilized a within-subjects eye-tracking design to examine both accurate and inaccurate recognition of five basic emotions (anger, disgust, fear, happiness, and sadness) in healthy young adults. Fifty participants (twenty-four women) completed a forced-choice categorization task with 10 stimuli (female/male poser x emotion). A remote eye tracker (60 Hz) recorded fixations mapped to eyes, nose, and mouth areas of interest (AOIs). The analyses combined accuracy and decision-time statistics with heatmap comparisons of misclassified versus accurate trials within the same image. Overall accuracy was 87.8% (439/500). Misclassification patterns depended on the target emotion, but not on participant gender. Fear male was most often misclassified (typically as disgust), and sadness female was frequently labeled as fear or disgust; disgust was the most incorrectly attributed response. For accurate trials, decision time showed main effects of emotion (p < 0.001) and participant gender (p = 0.033): happiness was categorized fastest and anger slowest, and women responded faster overall, with particularly fast response times for sadness. The AOI results revealed strong main effects and an AOI x emotion interaction (p < 0.001): eyes received the most fixations, but fear drew relatively more mouth sampling and sadness more nose sampling. Crucially, heatmaps showed an upper-face bias (eye AOI) in inaccurate trials, whereas accurate trials retained eye sampling and added nose and mouth AOI coverage, which aligned with diagnostic cues. These findings indicate that the scanpath strategy, in addition to information availability, underpins success and failure in basic-emotion recognition, with implications for theory, targeted training, and affective technologies.
dc.identifier.doi 10.3390/jemr18050053
dc.identifier.issn 1995-8692
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14411/10954
dc.identifier.uri https://doi.org/10.3390/jemr18050053
dc.language.iso en
dc.publisher MDPI
dc.rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
dc.subject Gender-Difference
dc.subject Face
dc.title Recognition and Misclassification Patterns of Basic Emotional Facial Expressions: An Eye-Tracking Study in Young Healthy Adults
dc.type Article
dspace.entity.type Publication
gdc.author.institutional Alkan, Neşe
gdc.coar.access open access
gdc.coar.type text::journal::journal article
gdc.description.department Atilim University
gdc.description.issue 5
gdc.description.publicationcategory Makale - Uluslararası Hakemli Dergi - Kurum Öğretim Elemanı
gdc.description.volume 18
gdc.description.woscitationindex Science Citation Index Expanded
gdc.identifier.pmid 41149955
gdc.identifier.wos WOS:001603733400001
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