Distinctive pupil and microsaccade-rate signatures in self-recognition
Lisa Schwetlick, Hendrik Graupner, Olaf Dimigen, Ralf Engbert

TL;DR
This study shows that pupil and microsaccade responses differ when recognizing self, familiar, and unfamiliar faces, revealing physiological signatures of face memory that could aid biometric authentication.
Contribution
The paper identifies specific pupil and microsaccade signatures associated with self-recognition, providing new insights into involuntary eye responses linked to face familiarity.
Findings
Attenuated pupil constriction for recognized faces
Greater pupil dilation for self-recognition
Stronger microsaccade inhibition for familiar faces
Abstract
Pupil dynamics and fixational eye movements are primarily involuntary processes that actively support visual perception during fixations. Both measures are known to be sensitive to ongoing cognitive and affective processing. In a visual fixation experiment (N=116) we demonstrate that self-recognition, familiar faces, and unfamiliar faces elicit specific responses in pupil dynamics and microsaccade rate. First, the pupil response comprises an immediate pupil constriction followed by a dilation in response to stimulus onsets. We observe attenuated constriction and greater dilation when faces are recognized compared to unknown faces. This effect is strongest for one's own face. Second, microsaccade rates, which generally show inhibitory responses to incoming stimuli, generate stronger inhibition for familiar faces compared to unknown faces. Again, the strongest inhibition is observed in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFace Recognition and Perception · Visual perception and processing mechanisms
