Morphological variants of silent bared-teeth displays have different social interaction outcomes in crested macaques (Macaca nigra)
DOI
10.1002/ajpa.24129
Document Type
Journal Article
Publication Date
11-1-2020
Publication Title
American Journal of Physical Anthropology
Volume
173
Issue
3
First Page
411
Last Page
422
ISSN
29483
Keywords
facial action coding system, facial expression, macaque, silent bared-teeth, social behavior
Abstract
Objectives: While it has been demonstrated that even subtle variation in human facial expressions can lead to significant changes in the meaning and function of expressions, relatively few studies have examined primate facial expressions using similarly objective and rigorous analysis. Construction of primate facial expression repertoires may, therefore, be oversimplified, with expressions often arbitrarily pooled and/or split into subjective pigeonholes. Our objective is to assess whether subtle variation in primate facial expressions is linked to variation in function, and hence to inform future attempts to quantify complexity of facial communication. Materials and Methods: We used Macaque Facial Action Coding System, an anatomically based and hence more objective tool, to quantify “silent bared-teeth” (SBT) expressions produced by wild crested macaques engaging in spontaneous behavior, and utilized discriminant analysis and bootstrapping analysis to look for morphological differences between SBT produced in four different contexts, defined by the outcome of interactions: Affiliation, Copulation, Play, and Submission. Results: We found that SBT produced in these contexts could be distinguished at significantly above-chance rates, indicating that the expressions produced in these four contexts differ morphologically. We identified the specific facial movements that were typically used in each context, and found that the variability and intensity of facial movements also varied between contexts. Discussion: These results indicate that nonhuman primate facial expressions share the human characteristic of exhibiting meaningful subtle differences. Complexity of facial communication may not be accurately represented simply by building repertoires of distinct expressions, so further work should attempt to take this subtle variability into account.
Open Access
Hybrid_Gold
Repository Citation
Clark, P., Waller, B., Burrows, A., Julle-Danière, E., Agil, M., Engelhardt, A., & Micheletta, J. (2020). Morphological variants of silent bared-teeth displays have different social interaction outcomes in crested macaques (Macaca nigra). American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 173 (3), 411-422. https://doi.org/10.1002/ajpa.24129