Suddendorf Thomas, Collier-Baker Emma
School of Psychology, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland 4072, Australia.
Proc Biol Sci. 2009 May 7;276(1662):1671-7. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2008.1754. Epub 2009 Feb 25.
Mirror self-recognition typically emerges in human children in the second year of life and has been documented in great apes. In contrast to monkeys, humans and great apes can use mirrors to inspect unusual marks on their body that cannot be seen directly. Here we show that lesser apes (family Hylobatidae) fail to use the mirror to find surreptitiously placed marks on their head, in spite of being strongly motivated to retrieve directly visible marks from the mirror surface itself and from their own limbs. These findings suggest that the capacity for visual self-recognition evolved in a common ancestor of all great apes after the split from the line that led to modern lesser apes approximately 18 Myr ago. They also highlight the potential of a comparative approach for identifying the neurological and genetic underpinnings of self-recognition and other higher cognitive faculties.
镜像自我识别通常在人类儿童一岁半左右出现,在大猩猩中也有记录。与猴子不同,人类和大猩猩能够利用镜子查看自己身上无法直接看到的特殊标记。我们在此表明,长臂猿(长臂猿科)无法利用镜子找到偷偷放在它们头上的标记,尽管它们有强烈的动机从镜子表面以及自己的肢体上找回直接可见的标记。这些发现表明,视觉自我识别能力是在大约1800万年前从导致现代长臂猿的谱系分化后,在所有大猩猩的共同祖先中演化而来的。它们还凸显了比较方法在确定自我识别和其他更高认知能力的神经学和遗传学基础方面的潜力。