![]() Comentarii Adauga Comentariu _ Tool reveals facial expressions of common marmosets![]() _ Tool reveals facial expressions of common marmosetsHow could a human mother tell that her child is upset? Humans can distinguish the meanings of facial expressions of our fellow species either explicitly through speech or implicitly by context. When decoding animal expressions, however, we face the challenge of interpreting familiar characteristics in proper context. For example, when we see teeth-exposing smiles among other human beings, the correct emotion with which it is usually associated is joy, whereas for other primates it is quite possibly an expression of fear or submission. A research team at Kyoto University has repurposed the human facial action coding system, or FACS, as a tool for cross-species systematic comparisons of facial muscles to help interpret the resulting expressions. Facial muscle contractions move portions of the skin, producing a set of visible appearance changes in the face. In turn, these changes act as cues for specific movements which FACS helps to identify. FACS analyzes and classifies the visible movements made by facial muscles into so-called action units, or AU. "Marmosets demonstrate socio-ecological characteristics and primitive facial musculature that would suggest facial mobility lower than other primates. But surprisingly, when we developed an adapted version of FACS, there was actually little difference," says lead author Catia Correia-Caeiro. The tool CalliFACS, named after the common marmosets, Callithrix jacchus, detected 33 facial movements, of which fifteen were AUs. This means that facial mobility in marmosets is lower than that in humans but similar to other primates studied, namely chimpanzees, orangutans, rhesus macaques, and gibbons. It has come as a surprise that the common marmoset possesses an unexpectedly high number of facial movements. To the team, it suggests that facial expressions are more ancient and prevalent among social animals than previously thought. "CalliFACS has clearly shown us just how complex animal communication might be," says the author. According to Correia-Caeiro, the development of a FACS for the common marmoset as the first new world primate is significant. "This has furthered the expansion of research on the evolution of human communication and emotion by comparing us to a more distantly related primate in facial expression studies," the author concludes. The study appears in PLOS ONE.
Linkul direct catre PetitieCitiți și cele mai căutate articole de pe Fluierul:
|
ieri 23:33
_ Păstrarea energiei în cameră
ieri 18:46
_ Ucraina îşi face armată de drone
ieri 13:31
_ Momota intră în finala Malaysia Open
ieri 12:31
_ Sovietizarea Americii � Un Gulag american
ieri 09:16
_ „ZOOM trageri” viitorul?
ieri 09:15
_ Ia o pauză TWITTER neobișnuit de lungă...
ieri 09:15
_ LUNA BITCOIN DIN IAD...
ieri 09:15
_ BURSĂ CEA MAI RĂU DIN 1970...
ieri 09:15
_ Mogulii gata să se întâlnească...
ieri 09:14
_ Quake Swarm Rattles Carolina de Sud...
ieri 09:13
_ Marea Britanie atinge 1.235...
ieri 09:11
_ DC cel mai tare iunie din '09...
ieri 09:10
_ Un lider pentru toți israelienii?
ieri 09:09
_ 25% deschis la revoltă armată...
ieri 09:08
_ Gradul de aprobare a rămas la 39%...
ieri 09:08
_ Zboruri nesigure?
ieri 09:08
_ CEL MAI Aglomerat WEEKEND DE LA PANDEMIE
ieri 09:07
_ „AIRMAGEDDON”
ieri 09:02
_ Insula Iubirii: șase bombe sunt tachinate
|
|
Comentarii:
Adauga Comentariu