Department of Anthropology, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH 03755, USA.
Biol Lett. 2011 Feb 23;7(1):86-8. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2010.0427. Epub 2010 Jun 30.
Anthropoid primates are distinguished from other mammals by having relatively large primary visual cortices (V1) and complex facial expressions. We present a comparative test of the hypothesis that facial expression processing coevolved with the expansion of V1 in anthropoids. Previously published data were analysed using phylogenetic comparative methods. The results of our study suggest a pattern of correlated evolution linking social group size, facial motor control and cortical visual processing in catarrhines, but not platyrrhines. Catarrhines that live in relatively large social groups tended to have relatively large facial motor nuclei, and relatively large primary visual cortices. We conclude that catarrhine brains are adapted for producing and processing complex facial displays.
灵长类动物的初级视皮层(V1)相对较大,并且具有复杂的面部表情,这使它们有别于其他哺乳动物。我们提出了一个假设的比较测试,即面部表情处理与灵长类动物 V1 的扩张共同进化。先前发表的数据使用系统发育比较方法进行了分析。我们的研究结果表明,在猫猴类中,社会群体规模、面部运动控制和皮质视觉处理之间存在着一种相关进化模式,但在阔鼻猴类中则没有。生活在相对较大的社会群体中的猫猴类往往具有相对较大的面部运动核和相对较大的初级视皮层。我们的结论是,猫猴类的大脑适应于产生和处理复杂的面部表情。