Abstract

BackgroundHumans detect faces with direct gazes among those with averted gazes more efficiently than they detect faces with averted gazes among those with direct gazes. We examined whether this “stare-in-the-crowd” effect occurs in chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes), whose eye morphology differs from that of humans (i.e., low-contrast eyes, dark sclera).Methodology/Principal FindingsAn adult female chimpanzee was trained to search for an odd-item target (front view of a human face) among distractors that differed from the target only with respect to the direction of the eye gaze. During visual-search testing, she performed more efficiently when the target was a direct-gaze face than when it was an averted-gaze face. This direct-gaze superiority was maintained when the faces were inverted and when parts of the face were scrambled. Subsequent tests revealed that gaze perception in the chimpanzee was controlled by the contrast between iris and sclera, as in humans, but that the chimpanzee attended only to the position of the iris in the eye, irrespective of head direction.Conclusion/SignificanceThese results suggest that the chimpanzee can discriminate among human gaze directions and are more sensitive to direct gazes. However, limitations in the perception of human gaze by the chimpanzee are suggested by her inability to completely transfer her performance to faces showing a three-quarter view.

Highlights

  • Gaze perception is one of the most critical social–cognitive abilities possessed by primates, including humans

  • Conclusion/Significance: These results suggest that the chimpanzee can discriminate among human gaze directions and are more sensitive to direct gazes

  • Stare-in-the-Crowd Effect In this study, we investigated how an adult chimpanzee, Chloe, perceived human gaze direction under visual-search and odditydiscrimination conditions

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Summary

Introduction

Gaze perception is one of the most critical social–cognitive abilities possessed by primates, including humans. Many species of simian primates exhibit ‘‘gaze aversion’’ because mutual gaze or eye contact frequently triggers antagonistic interactions between those involved in the gazing behaviors [7,8,9,10]. Humans detect faces with direct gazes among those with averted gazes more efficiently than they detect faces with averted gazes among those with direct gazes. We examined whether this ‘‘stare-in-the-crowd’’ effect occurs in chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes), whose eye morphology differs from that of humans (i.e., low-contrast eyes, dark sclera)

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