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灵长类动物的社会生态学塑造了独特面部表达的进化。

Primate socio-ecology shapes the evolution of distinctive facial repertoires.

机构信息

Department of Psychology, Lyon College.

Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Max Planck Research Group 'Naturalistic Social Cognition'.

出版信息

J Comp Psychol. 2024 Feb;138(1):32-44. doi: 10.1037/com0000350. Epub 2023 May 11.

Abstract

Primate facial musculature enables a wide variety of movements during bouts of communication, but how these movements contribute to signal construction and repertoire size is unclear. The suggests that morphological constraints shape the evolution of facial repertoires: species with higher facial mobility will produce larger and more complex repertoires. In contrast, the suggests that social needs shape the evolution of facial repertoires: as social complexity increases, so does communicative repertoire size. We tested these two hypotheses by comparing chimpanzees () and gibbons (family ), two distantly related apes who vary in their facial mobility and social organization. While gibbons have higher facial mobility than chimpanzees, chimpanzees live in more complex social groups than gibbons. We compared the morphology and complexity of facial repertoires for both apes using Facial Action Coding Systems designed for chimpanzees and gibbons. Our comparisons were made at the level of individual muscle movements (action units [AUs]) and the level of muscle movement combinations (AU combinations). Our results show that the chimpanzee facial signaling repertoire was larger and more complex than gibbons, consistent with the On average, chimpanzees produced AU combinations consisting of more morphologically distinct AUs than gibbons. Moreover, chimpanzees also produced more morphologically distinct AU combinations than gibbons, even when focusing exclusively on AUs present in both apes. Therefore, our results suggest that socio-ecological factors were more important than anatomical ones to the evolution of facial signaling repertoires in chimpanzees and gibbons. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

摘要

灵长类动物的面部肌肉使它们在交流过程中能够进行各种各样的动作,但这些动作如何有助于信号的构建和信号组合的大小尚不清楚。形态约束假说表明,形态约束塑造了面部信号组合的进化:面部活动度较高的物种会产生更大、更复杂的信号组合。相比之下,社会需求假说表明,社会需求塑造了面部信号组合的进化:随着社会复杂性的增加,交流信号组合的大小也会增加。我们通过比较两种亲缘关系较远的猿类——黑猩猩()和长臂猿(家族),检验了这两个假说。这两种猿类的面部活动度和社会组织方式不同。虽然长臂猿的面部活动度高于黑猩猩,但黑猩猩生活的社会群体比长臂猿更复杂。我们使用为黑猩猩和长臂猿设计的面部动作编码系统,比较了这两种猿类的面部信号组合的形态和复杂性。我们的比较是在个体肌肉运动(动作单元 [AU])和肌肉运动组合(AU 组合)的水平上进行的。我们的研究结果表明,黑猩猩的面部信号组合比长臂猿更大、更复杂,这与形态约束假说一致。平均而言,黑猩猩产生的 AU 组合中包含的形态上更独特的 AU 比长臂猿多。此外,即使只关注两种猿类都存在的 AU,黑猩猩产生的形态上更独特的 AU 组合也比长臂猿多。因此,我们的研究结果表明,社会生态因素对黑猩猩和长臂猿面部信号组合的进化比解剖因素更重要。(PsycInfo 数据库记录(c)2024 APA,保留所有权利)。

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