Paukner Annika, Wooddell Lauren J, Lefevre Carmen E, Lonsdorf Eric, Lonsdorf Elizabeth
Laboratory of Comparative Ethology, Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development.
Centre for Behaviour Change, University College London.
J Comp Psychol. 2017 Feb;131(1):73-77. doi: 10.1037/com0000052.
In humans, facial symmetry has been linked to an individual's genetic quality, and facial symmetry has a small yet significant effect on ratings of facial attractiveness. The same evolutionary processes underlying these phenomena may also convey a selective advantage to symmetrical individuals of other primate species, yet to date, few studies have examined sensitivity to facial symmetry in nonhuman primates. Here we presented images of symmetrical and asymmetrical human and monkey faces to tufted capuchin monkeys (Sapajus apella) and hypothesized that capuchins would visually prefer symmetrical faces of opposite-sex conspecifics. Instead, we found that male capuchins preferentially attended to symmetrical male conspecific faces, whereas female capuchins did not appear to discriminate between symmetrical and asymmetrical faces. These results suggest that male capuchin monkeys may use facial symmetry to judge male quality in intramale competition. (PsycINFO Database Record
在人类中,面部对称性与个体的遗传质量有关,并且面部对称性对面部吸引力评分有微小但显著的影响。这些现象背后相同的进化过程可能也会给其他灵长类物种的对称个体带来选择优势,然而迄今为止,很少有研究考察非人类灵长类动物对面部对称性的敏感度。在这里,我们向簇绒卷尾猴(Sapajus apella)展示了对称和不对称的人类及猴子面部图像,并假设卷尾猴在视觉上会更喜欢异性同种个体的对称面孔。相反,我们发现雄性卷尾猴优先关注对称的雄性同种个体面孔,而雌性卷尾猴似乎没有区分对称和不对称面孔。这些结果表明,雄性卷尾猴可能在雄性间竞争中利用面部对称性来判断雄性质量。(PsycINFO数据库记录)