| Literature DB >> 19816544 |
Alexandra Alvergne, Elise Huchard, Damien Caillaud, Marie J E Charpentier, Joanna M Setchell, Charlène Ruppli, Delphine Féjan, Laura Martinez, Guy Cowlishaw, Michel Raymond.
Abstract
The assessment of relatedness is a key determinant in the evolution of social behavior in primates. Humans are able to detect kin visually in their own species using facial phenotypes, and facial resemblance in turn influences both prosocial behaviors and mating decisions. This suggests that cognitive abilities that allow facial kin detection in conspecifics have been favored in the species by kin selection. We investigated the extent to which humans are able to recognize kin visually by asking human judges to assess facial resemblance in 4 other primate species (common chimpanzees, western lowland gorillas, mandrills, and chacma baboons) on the basis of pictures of faces. Humans achieved facial interspecific kin recognition in all species except baboons. Facial resemblance is a reliable indicator of relatedness in at least chimpanzees, gorillas, and mandrills, and future work should explore if the primates themselves also share the ability to detect kin facially.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19816544 PMCID: PMC2758396 DOI: 10.1007/s10764-009-9339-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Primatol ISSN: 0164-0291 Impact factor: 2.264
Fig. 1Interspecific facial kin recognition test. We asked human judges to 1) look at the face of the referent individual presented below and to (2) choose which picture was most likely to portray its female relative among the pictures proposed above. We randomized the order of the referent individuals, the position of relatives, as well as the choice of nonrelatives. A given judge viewed each picture only once, and we presented each judge to 1 species only. (A) Facial kin recognition test using chimpanzee faces. The correct choice is the left picture. (B) Facial kin recognition test using gorilla faces. The correct choice is the middle picture. (C) Facial kin recognition test using mandrill faces. The correct choice is the right picture. (D) Facial kin recognition test using baboon faces. The correct choice is the right picture.
Fig. 2Facial resemblance between relatives in 4 primate species, according to human judges. The y-axis shows the proportion of facial recognition divided by the rate expected by chance. The dashed line represents the recognition rate expected by chance. Facial kin detection rates significantly exceeded the rate expected by chance in chimpanzees, gorillas, and mandrills (exact binomial tests: p < 0.001). In contrast, human judges are not able to detect kin visually in baboons (exact binomial tests: p = 0.63). Error bars represent the standard error of the weighted means. The rate of recognition was not different among chimpanzees, gorillas, and mandrills but baboon scores were significantly different from those of the other species. See text for details. (**p < 0.01; non significant (n.s.) p > 0.05).