Kohda Masanori, Sogawa Shumpei, Sowersby Will
Laboratory of Animal Sociology, Department of Biology, Graduate School of Sciences, Osaka Metropolitan University, Osaka, Japan.
Front Psychol. 2024 Nov 27;15:1497386. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1497386. eCollection 2024.
The face is the most important area on the human body for visually differentiating between individuals. When encountering another person, humans initially gaze at and perceive the face holistically, utilizing relational information and specific neural systems. Information such as identity and emotional state are then obtained from the face by distinguishing between small inter-individual differences, i.e., relational information. Similar patterns and mechanisms underlying individual face recognition have been documented in primates, other social mammals, birds, and more recently in some fishes. Like humans, fish are capable of rapidly (<0.5 s) and accurately recognizing multiple familiar conspecifics by individual-specific variation in the face. Fish can also recognize faces from various distances and angles, providing evidence for mental representation of faces in this large and diverse vertebrate group. One species, the cleaner fish, has even demonstrated mirror self-recognition (MSR) via self-face recognition, strengthening the claim that non-human animals are capable of having mental images and concepts of faces. Here, we review the evidence for individual face recognition in fishes and speculate that face identification neural networks are both similar and widespread across vertebrates. Furthermore, we hypothesize that face recognition in vertebrates originated in bony fishes in the Paleozoic era ~450 Mya, when social systems first evolved, increasing the importance of individual recognition.
面部是人体在视觉上区分个体的最重要区域。当遇到另一个人时,人类首先会整体地注视和感知面部,利用关系信息和特定的神经系统。然后,通过区分个体间的细微差异,即关系信息,从面部获取诸如身份和情绪状态等信息。在灵长类动物、其他群居哺乳动物、鸟类以及最近在一些鱼类中,都记录了个体面部识别背后的类似模式和机制。与人类一样,鱼类能够通过面部的个体特异性变化快速(<0.5秒)且准确地识别多个熟悉的同种个体。鱼类还能从不同距离和角度识别面部,为这个庞大且多样的脊椎动物群体中面部的心理表征提供了证据。一种清洁鱼甚至通过自我面部识别展示了镜像自我识别(MSR),强化了非人类动物能够拥有面部心理图像和概念的观点。在这里,我们回顾了鱼类个体面部识别的证据,并推测面部识别神经网络在脊椎动物中既相似又广泛存在。此外,我们假设脊椎动物的面部识别起源于约4.5亿年前古生代的硬骨鱼类,当时社会系统首次进化,增加了个体识别的重要性。