The Effect of Fixation Location on Face Perception in Younger and Older Adults

Poster Presentation 56.314: Tuesday, May 21, 2024, 2:45 – 6:45 pm, Banyan Breezeway
Session: Face and Body Perception: Wholes, parts configurations, features

Eric Cui1,2 (), Farhan Vaheed3, Matthew Clark3, Björn Herrmann1,2, Allison Sekuler1,2,3; 1Rotman Research Institute, Baycrest Academy for Research and Education, North, ON, Canada, 2Department of Psychology, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada, 3Department of Psychology, Neuroscience, and Behavioural Neuroscience, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada

Information of different facial features is distributed in various facial regions. For instance, the eye region, compared to other areas, is particularly informative for identity perception. However, not all observer focus on the eye region for this purpose. There are inter-individual differences in the region in which younger individuals fixate for identity perception: some preferred the eyes, the nose for the others. Fixation patterns also differ between age groups: older adults have more fixations on the lower half of the face compared to younger adults. However, when fixation is restricted to specific regions, younger adults demonstrated the best identity perception when fixation was restricted to the eye. Where do younger and older adults look on faces, and can they show improved performance in recognizing faces when focusing on specific facial regions? The first objective of this study is to describe and compare the optimal fixation locations of younger and older observers. The second objective is to investigate how restricting fixation location interacts with age on face perception. Each trial started with the presentation of a fixation square, followed by the target face, and a face selection task. The off-face condition began with a fixation square outside the face’s anticipated display area. The on-face condition started with a fixation square on the forehead, eye, nose, or mouth. Preliminary analysis showed age-related in both conditions (20 younger and 20 older adults). Restricting the fixation location seems to reduce these age-related differences, with older adults showing improved performance, particularly at the eye and nose locations. Notably, an age-related difference emerged at the nose location, where older adults benefited more from nose restriction fixation than younger adults. Both younger and older adults showed greater performance in face perception when the initial fixation was directed to the eye and the nose region.