06 November 2019 , 18:00 - 19:30

Guest talk: Stefan R. Schweinberger (Jena)

“Parameter-specific facial and vocal morphing: Perspectives for application to nonverbal communication research”

Hosted by: Research Group Clinical Psychology of Social Interaction (Prof. Dr. Isabel Dziobek)

The aim of this talk is to demonstrate how parameter-specific morphing techniques can enhance our understanding of the role of sensory information for the processing of social and affective signals from faces and voices. Following the inventions of visual (image) morphing technology by Benson and Perrett around 1990, and of auditory morphing 〜ten years later by Kawahara, we can now go beyond classical morphing, averaging, or caricaturing. Specifically, we use the technology to selectively manipulate independent parameters (e.g., 3D-shape or texture/colouration of faces; fundamental frequency, timbre, or temporal aspects of voices). This allows us to determine the relative importance of these image (or sound) characteristics for social perceptions of age, gender, identity or affect in neurotypical participants. It also can help to assess processing changes in individuals with sensory impairments (e.g., vision or hearing disorders) or with central impairments (e.g., autism, prosopagnosia). For example, experiments with faces consistently revealed a dominant role of texture information over shape, at variance with older claims that spatial configural information is crucial to familiar face recognition. Qualifying this pattern, data from individuals with poor face recognition skills suggest that they rely relatively more on shape, and less on texture information. For voices, I present current results both from normal listeners and from cochlear implant users. Overall, I promote parameter-specific morphing to be a promising new approach to objectively assess individual profiles of face or voice perception abilities.

Prof. Dr. Stefan R. Schweinberger, Friedrich Schiller University Jena, General Psychology and Cognitive Neuroscience


All are welcome!

 

Contact:

Dr. Jennifer Kirchner

030 / 2093-99745

 

Location:

Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin

Luisenstraße 56

10117 Berlin, Room 144