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灵长类动物的社会注意力:人类、大型猿类和猕猴的物种差异和个体经验的影响。

Primate social attention: Species differences and effects of individual experience in humans, great apes, and macaques.

机构信息

Kumamoto Sanctuary, Wildlife Research Center, Kyoto University, Kumamoto, Japan.

The Rockefeller University, New York, New York, United States of America.

出版信息

PLoS One. 2018 Feb 23;13(2):e0193283. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0193283. eCollection 2018.

Abstract

When viewing social scenes, humans and nonhuman primates focus on particular features, such as the models' eyes, mouth, and action targets. Previous studies reported that such viewing patterns vary significantly across individuals in humans, and also across closely-related primate species. However, the nature of these individual and species differences remains unclear, particularly among nonhuman primates. In large samples of human and nonhuman primates, we examined species differences and the effects of experience on patterns of gaze toward social movies. Experiment 1 examined the species differences across rhesus macaques, nonhuman apes (bonobos, chimpanzees, and orangutans), and humans while they viewed movies of various animals' species-typical behaviors. We found that each species had distinct viewing patterns of the models' faces, eyes, mouths, and action targets. Experiment 2 tested the effect of individuals' experience on chimpanzee and human viewing patterns. We presented movies depicting natural behaviors of chimpanzees to three groups of chimpanzees (individuals from a zoo, a sanctuary, and a research institute) differing in their early social and physical experiences. We also presented the same movies to human adults and children differing in their expertise with chimpanzees (experts vs. novices) or movie-viewing generally (adults vs. preschoolers). Individuals varied within each species in their patterns of gaze toward models' faces, eyes, mouths, and action targets depending on their unique individual experiences. We thus found that the viewing patterns for social stimuli are both individual- and species-specific in these closely-related primates. Such individual/species-specificities are likely related to both individual experience and species-typical temperament, suggesting that primate individuals acquire their unique attentional biases through both ontogeny and evolution. Such unique attentional biases may help them learn efficiently about their particular social environments.

摘要

当观察社交场景时,人类和非人类灵长类动物会关注特定的特征,例如模型的眼睛、嘴巴和动作目标。先前的研究报告称,这种观察模式在人类个体之间以及在密切相关的灵长类物种之间存在显著差异。然而,这些个体和物种差异的性质仍不清楚,特别是在非人类灵长类动物中。在大量的人类和非人类灵长类动物样本中,我们研究了物种差异以及经验对注视社交电影模式的影响。实验 1 检验了恒河猴、非人类猿类(倭黑猩猩、黑猩猩和猩猩)和人类在观看各种动物物种典型行为的电影时的物种差异。我们发现,每种动物都有其独特的观察模型面部、眼睛、嘴巴和动作目标的模式。实验 2 测试了个体经验对黑猩猩和人类观察模式的影响。我们向三组黑猩猩(来自动物园、保护区和研究所的个体)展示了描绘黑猩猩自然行为的电影,这些个体在早期的社交和身体经验方面存在差异。我们还向人类成年人和儿童展示了相同的电影,这些儿童在与黑猩猩的专业知识(专家与新手)或电影观看一般(成年人与学龄前儿童)方面存在差异。每个物种的个体在其对模型面部、眼睛、嘴巴和动作目标的注视模式上都存在差异,这取决于其独特的个体经验。因此,我们发现,在这些密切相关的灵长类动物中,社交刺激的观察模式既有个体特异性又有物种特异性。这种个体/物种特异性可能与个体经验和物种典型的气质有关,这表明灵长类动物个体通过个体发育和进化获得其独特的注意力偏向。这种独特的注意力偏向可能有助于他们有效地了解其特定的社会环境。

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