Parr Lisa A, Waller Bridget M, Vick Sarah J
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences and Yerkes National Primate Research Center, Emory University.
Curr Dir Psychol Sci. 2007 Jun 15;16(3):117-122. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-8721.2007.00487.x.
There has been little research over the past few decades focusing on similarities and differences in the form and function of emotional signals in nonhuman primates, or whether these communication systems are homologous with those of humans. This is, in part, due to the fact that detailed and objective measurement tools to answer such questions have not been systematically developed for nonhuman primate research. Despite this, emotion research in humans has benefited for over 30 years from an objective, anatomically based facial-measurement tool: the Facial Action Coding System. In collaboration with other researchers, we have now developed a similar system for chimpanzees (ChimpFACS) and, in the process, have made exciting new discoveries regarding chimpanzees' perception and categorization of emotional facial expressions, similarities in the facial anatomy of chimpanzees and humans, and we have identified homologous facial movements in the two species. Investigating similarities and differences in primate emotional communication systems is essential if we are to understand unique evolutionary specializations among different species.
在过去几十年里,几乎没有研究关注非人类灵长类动物情感信号在形式和功能上的异同,也没有研究探讨这些交流系统是否与人类的同源。部分原因在于,尚未针对非人类灵长类动物研究系统地开发出用于回答此类问题的详细且客观的测量工具。尽管如此,30多年来,人类情感研究受益于一种基于解剖学的客观面部测量工具:面部动作编码系统。我们与其他研究人员合作,现已为黑猩猩开发出类似系统(黑猩猩面部动作编码系统),在此过程中,我们在黑猩猩对情感面部表情的感知和分类、黑猩猩与人类面部解剖结构的相似性方面有了令人兴奋的新发现,并且我们还确定了这两个物种中同源的面部动作。如果我们要了解不同物种间独特的进化特化,研究灵长类动物情感交流系统的异同至关重要。