On the brain struggles to recognize basic facial emotions with face masks: an fMRI study
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/34501Date
2024-01-26Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Aboutalebi, Jubin; Gallo, Federico; Fedeli, Davide; Houdayer, Elise; Zangrillo, Federica; Emedoli, Daniele; Spina, Alfio; Bellini, Camilla; Del Maschio, Nicola; Iannaccone, Sandro; Alemanno, FedericaAbstract
Methods: A total of 25 healthy participants (13F; mean age: 32.64 ± 7.24y; mean education: 18.28 ± 1.31y) were included. Participants underwent task-related fMRI during the presentation of images of faces expressing basic emotions (joy or fear versus neutral expression). Half of the faces were covered by a face mask. Subjects had to recognize the facial emotion (masked or unmasked). FMRI whole-brain and regions-of-interest analyses were performed, as well as psychophysiological interaction analysis (PPI).
Results: Subjects recognized better and faster emotions on unmasked faces. FMRI analyses showed that masked faces induced a stronger activation of a right occipito-temporal cluster, including the fusiform gyrus and the occipital face area bilaterally. The same activation pattern was found for the neutral masked > neutral unmasked contrast. PPI analyses of the masked > unmasked contrast showed, in the right occipital face area, a stronger correlation with the left superior frontal gyrus, left precentral gyrus, left superior parietal lobe, and the right supramarginal gyrus.
Discussion: Our study showed how our brain differentially struggles to recognize face-masked basic emotions, implementing more neural resources to correctly categorize those incomplete facial expressions.