| Literature DB >> 31986855 |
Anne R Eglash1, Charles T Snowdon1.
Abstract
Only a few nonhuman species (chimpanzees and orangutans) have displayed mirror-image recognition of themselves by grooming at a spot that can only be seen with the mirror. Pygmy marmosets have never been observed to self-groom, but they do behave toward mirrors in a manner suggestive of the early stages of mirror-image recognition. They displayed a rapid extinction of social threat responses to their own image and of novelty responses to mirrors, but continued to show mirror-specific responses such as following their own image, playing peek-a-boo, and looking at their image throughout a 28-day period of mirror exposure. The pygmy marmosets used a mirror to locate otherwise unseen conspecifics from other groups and directed threat responses toward the real location of these animals rather than to their mirror-image. Pygmy marmosets displayed the precursor behaviors to mirror-image recognition.Entities:
Keywords: Cebuella pygmaea; mirror‐image recognition; novelty responses; pygmy marmosets; self‐recognition
Year: 1983 PMID: 31986855 DOI: 10.1002/ajp.1350050305
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Primatol ISSN: 0275-2565 Impact factor: 2.371