School of Psychology, Sport and Health Sciences, University of Portsmouth, Portsmouth, UK.
College of Arts and Law, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK.
Sci Rep. 2024 Nov 6;14(1):26921. doi: 10.1038/s41598-024-74089-x.
Laugh faces of humans play a key role in everyday social interactions as a pervasive tool of communication across contexts. Humans often vary the degree of mouth opening and teeth exposure when producing these facial expressions, which may depend on who their social partner is (e.g., their gender and age as well as their social relationship), serving this way different functions. Although it was found that laugh faces show evolutionary continuity across humans and non-human great apes according to the Principle of Maximum Parsimony, little is known about the function of laugh face variations from an evolutionary perspective. Hence, the present work examined the morphology of laugh faces in orangutan and chimpanzee dyadic play to test if they are modified with dependence on the playmate's characteristics (sex, age and social relationship). In total, we analysed over 600 facial expressions of 14 orangutans and 17 chimpanzees by coding the specific muscle activations (Action Units, i.e. AUs) contributing to these expressions, using OrangFACS and ChimpFACS, respectively. Our results suggest that age difference and, to a lesser extent, playmate sex influence laugh face morphology in both taxa, but in opposite ways. While the orangutans of our study seem to expose their upper teeth (with AU10) and to pull the mouth corners (with AU12) more towards weaker partners (younger and female), possibly to communicate non-hostility, the chimpanzees showed both upper and lower teeth exposure (with AU10 and AU16) more often when interacting with the stronger partners (older individuals), possibly to communicate submissiveness. These findings suggest that the ability of humans to modify laugh faces with dependence on social partner characteristics has most likely evolved from pre-existing traits, going back at least to the last common ancestor of today's great apes, including humans.
人类的笑脸在日常社交互动中起着关键作用,是一种跨情境的普遍交流工具。人类在产生这些面部表情时,经常会改变口张开的程度和牙齿暴露的程度,这可能取决于他们的社交伙伴是谁(例如,他们的性别、年龄以及他们的社会关系),从而具有不同的功能。尽管根据最大简约原则,人们发现笑脸在人类和非人类的大猿中具有进化上的连续性,但从进化的角度来看,笑脸的变化功能还知之甚少。因此,本研究检查了猩猩和黑猩猩在玩耍时的笑脸形态,以检验它们是否会根据玩伴的特征(性别、年龄和社会关系)而发生变化。总共,我们通过分别使用 OrangFACS 和 ChimpFACS 对 14 只猩猩和 17 只黑猩猩的超过 600 个面部表情进行了分析,对产生这些表情的特定肌肉激活(动作单元,即 AUs)进行了编码。我们的研究结果表明,年龄差异以及在较小程度上,玩伴的性别会影响这两个物种的笑脸形态,但影响方式相反。在我们的研究中,猩猩似乎会向较弱的伙伴(年幼的和雌性的)露出上牙(用 AU10)并将嘴角向后拉(用 AU12),可能是为了传达不具有敌意,而黑猩猩在与更强壮的伙伴(年长的个体)互动时则更多地露出上牙和下牙(用 AU10 和 AU16),可能是为了传达顺从。这些发现表明,人类根据社交伙伴的特征来改变笑脸的能力很可能是从至少可以追溯到今天的大猿(包括人类)的最后共同祖先的现有特征进化而来的。