Department of Anthropology, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH 03755, USA.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2012 Jul 5;367(1597):1901-8. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2011.0224.
Recent comparative evidence suggests that anthropoid primates are the only vertebrates to exhibit a quantitative relationship between relative brain size and social group size. In this paper, I attempt to explain this pattern with regard to facial expressivity and social bonding. I hypothesize that facial motor control increases as a secondary consequence of neocortical expansion owing to cortical innervation of the facial motor nucleus. This is supported by new analyses demonstrating correlated evolution between relative neocortex size and relative facial nucleus size. I also hypothesize that increased facial motor control correlates with enhanced emotional expressivity, which provides the opportunity for individuals to better gauge the trustworthiness of group members. This is supported by previous evidence from human psychology, as well as new analyses demonstrating a positive relationship between allogrooming and facial nucleus volume. I suggest new approaches to the study of primate facial expressivity in light of these hypotheses.
近期的对比证据表明,灵长类动物是唯一表现出相对大脑尺寸与社会群体规模之间定量关系的脊椎动物。在本文中,我试图从表情表达和社交联系的角度解释这种模式。我假设,由于大脑皮质对面部运动核的神经支配,大脑新皮质扩张会导致面部运动控制增加,这是次要的结果。这一点得到了新的分析结果的支持,这些结果表明相对大脑新皮质大小和相对面部核大小之间存在相关进化。我还假设,增加的面部运动控制与增强的情感表达相关,这为个体提供了更好地评估群体成员可信度的机会。这得到了来自人类心理学的先前证据的支持,以及新的分析结果,这些结果表明梳理行为与面部核体积之间存在正相关关系。根据这些假设,我提出了研究灵长类动物面部表情的新方法。