Monkeys integrate facial expressions and direct gaze to modulate gaze-following behavior

猴子会整合面部表情和直接注视来调节注视跟随行为。

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Abstract

For humans, being looked at directly can boost our readiness to follow another's gaze, but can monkeys invite an observer to engage with them in the same way? We trained three rhesus macaques on a head gaze-following task in which the portrait of a demonstrator monkey would face the viewer before turning to look at a distinct spatial target. The demonstrator could face the viewer with their eyes opened or closed and display different facial expressions. Unlike in humans, we found that direct gaze alone, devoid of an accompanying specific expression failed to influence the latency of the subsequent gaze-following response. However, when combined with threat, direct gaze significantly accelerated gaze-following. In a second experiment, we show that once turned away the expression associated with prior direct gaze no longer mattered; instead a submissive facial expression accompanying the gaze shift delayed gaze-following. Direct comparison of both experiments reveals that expressions accompanying direct gaze trigger earlier gaze-following responses than the same expressions joining gaze aversion. These results document the behavioral relevance of threat-related facial expressions for gaze-following in rhesus macaques, with expressions that signal conflict selectively expediting orienting responses.

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