top of page

Do Naturalistic Emotional Facial Expressions Catch Our Eye Like Posed Ones?

  • Writer: Natalie Peluso
    Natalie Peluso
  • Jul 2
  • 2 min read

We know that people tend to notice emotional faces—like smiling or angry expressions—more quickly than neutral ones. But most research showing this uses “posed” faces: actors in a lab deliberately showing specific emotions under ideal lighting and conditions. In everyday life, however, expressions are much more natural and messy.

In our study, which has been published in the journal Emotion, we asked whether people are still just as quick and accurate when responding to real, less controlled facial expressions. We tracked people’s eye movements while they looked at pairs of faces and asked them to quickly look toward the happier face. Surprisingly, even though naturalistic faces were less polished and more variable, people were still fast and accurate at spotting emotional expressions—sometimes even faster than with the posed faces. This shows that our brains are well-tuned to pick up emotional cues in real-life situations, not just in staged photos, and it suggests we should study emotion using more realistic images of people.


Why is it important?

While most existing studies rely on carefully controlled, posed images, we show that spontaneous, real-world facial expressions are not only meaningful—they can guide attention just as effectively, and sometimes even more quickly. This is especially timely as psychology and neuroscience increasingly shift toward ecologically valid methods that reflect everyday human experience. The findings challenge long-held assumptions about how we measure emotional perception and attention, and they highlight the need for more naturalistic approaches in face and emotion research. Ultimately, this work brings us one step closer to understanding how people actually see and interpret faces in the real world—something that matters in fields ranging from social cognition and mental health to AI and human-computer interaction.

This page is a summary of: Toward ecological validity in expression discrimination: Forced-choice saccadic responses to posed and naturalistic faces., Emotion, April 2025, American Psychological Association (APA),






  • Bluesky_butterfly-logo.svg
  • Google Scholar
  • osf
  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram

PO Box 4030
St Lucia South, QLD

Australia 4067

Acknowledgement of Country

I acknowledge the Turrbal and Jagera people - the traditional custodians of Meanjin (Brisbane) - and their connections to land, sea and community; where the songlines, stories, songs, ancestors and dreamings of First Nations peoples continue to resonate. I pay my respect to their Elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today.

 

© 2025 Natalie Christie Peluso

 

bottom of page