Wilson Duncan A, Tomonaga Masaki
Primate Research Institute, Kyoto University, Inuyama, Aichi, 484-8506, Japan.
Primates. 2018 May;59(3):243-251. doi: 10.1007/s10329-018-0649-8. Epub 2018 Jan 23.
Many primate studies have investigated discrimination of individual faces within the same species. However, few studies have looked at discrimination between primate species faces at the categorical level. This study systematically examined the factors important for visual discrimination between primate species faces in chimpanzees, including: colour, orientation, familiarity, and perceptual similarity. Five adult female chimpanzees were tested on their ability to discriminate identical and categorical (non-identical) images of different primate species faces in a series of touchscreen matching-to-sample experiments. Discrimination performance for chimpanzee, gorilla, and orangutan faces was better in colour than in greyscale. An inversion effect was also found, with higher accuracy for upright than inverted faces. Discrimination performance for unfamiliar (baboon and capuchin monkey) and highly familiar (chimpanzee and human) but perceptually different species was equally high. After excluding effects of colour and familiarity, difficulty in discriminating between different species faces can be best explained by their perceptual similarity to each other. Categorical discrimination performance for unfamiliar, perceptually similar faces (gorilla and orangutan) was significantly worse than unfamiliar, perceptually different faces (baboon and capuchin monkey). Moreover, multidimensional scaling analysis of the image similarity data based on local feature matching revealed greater similarity between chimpanzee, gorilla and orangutan faces than between human, baboon and capuchin monkey faces. We conclude our chimpanzees appear to perceive similarity in primate faces in a similar way to humans. Information about perceptual similarity is likely prioritized over the potential influence of previous experience or a conceptual representation of species for categorical discrimination between species faces.
许多灵长类动物研究调查了同一物种内个体面孔的辨别能力。然而,很少有研究从类别层面考察灵长类物种面孔之间的辨别。本研究系统地研究了对黑猩猩进行灵长类物种面孔视觉辨别时重要的因素,包括:颜色、方向、熟悉程度和感知相似度。在一系列触摸屏样本匹配实验中,对五只成年雌性黑猩猩辨别不同灵长类物种面孔的相同和类别(不同)图像的能力进行了测试。黑猩猩、大猩猩和猩猩面孔的颜色辨别表现优于灰度辨别。还发现了倒置效应,正立面孔的辨别准确率高于倒置面孔。对不熟悉的(狒狒和卷尾猴)以及非常熟悉的(黑猩猩和人类)但在感知上不同的物种的辨别表现同样很高。在排除颜色和熟悉程度的影响后,不同物种面孔之间辨别困难程度最好用它们彼此之间的感知相似度来解释。对不熟悉的、在感知上相似的面孔(大猩猩和猩猩)的类别辨别表现明显低于不熟悉的、在感知上不同的面孔(狒狒和卷尾猴)。此外,基于局部特征匹配的图像相似度数据的多维尺度分析显示,黑猩猩、大猩猩和猩猩面孔之间的相似度高于人类、狒狒和卷尾猴面孔之间的相似度。我们得出结论,我们的黑猩猩似乎以与人类相似的方式感知灵长类面孔的相似度。在对物种面孔进行类别辨别时,关于感知相似度的信息可能比先前经验或物种概念表征的潜在影响更具优先级。