How chimpanzees look at pictures: a comparative eye-tracking study

Surprisingly little is known about the eye movements of chimpanzees, despite the potential contribution of such knowledge to comparative cognition studies. Here, we present the first examination of eye tracking in chimpanzees. We recorded the eye movements of chimpanzees as they viewed naturalistic pictures containing a full-body image of a chimpanzee, a human or another mammal; results were compared with those from humans. We found a striking similarity in viewing patterns between the two species. Both chimpanzees and humans looked at the animal figures for longer than at the background and at the face region for longer than at other parts of the body. The face region was detected at first sight by both species when they were shown pictures of chimpanzees and of humans. However, the eye movements of chimpanzees also exhibited distinct differences from those of humans; the former shifted the fixation location more quickly and more broadly than the latter. In addition, the average duration of fixation on the face region was shorter in chimpanzees than in humans. Overall, our results clearly demonstrate the eye-movement strategies common to the two primate species and also suggest several notable differences manifested during the observation of pictures of scenes and body forms.

[1]  Katalin M. Gothard,et al.  How do rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) scan faces in a visual paired comparison task? , 2004, Animal Cognition.

[2]  Christopher M. Harris,et al.  Characteristics of saccades in human infants , 1984, Vision Research.

[3]  A. L. Yarbus Eye Movements During Perception of Complex Objects , 1967 .

[4]  M L Abercrombie,et al.  Non-verbal communication. , 1972, Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine.

[5]  Masayuki Tanaka Visual preference by chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) for photos of primates measured by a free choice-order task: implication for influence of social experience , 2003, Primates.

[6]  Kazuo Hiraki,et al.  Auditory ERPs to Stimulus Deviance in an Awake Chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes): Towards Hominid Cognitive Neurosciences , 2008, PloS one.

[7]  Thomas D. Albright,et al.  How Do Monkeys Look at Faces? , 1997, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[8]  Shaul Hochstein,et al.  At first sight: A high-level pop out effect for faces , 2005, Vision Research.

[9]  G. Csibra,et al.  Action Anticipation Through Attribution of False Belief by 2-Year-Olds , 2007, Psychological science.

[10]  Tetsuro Matsuzawa,et al.  Sociocognitive Development in Chimpanzees: A Synthesis of Laboratory Work and Fieldwork , 2006 .

[11]  T. Matsuzawa,et al.  A new procedure to study the perceptual world of animals with sensory reinforcement: Recognition of humans by a chimpanzee , 1986, Primates.

[12]  Patricia S. Goldman-Rakic,et al.  Face scanning and responsiveness to social cues in infant rhesus monkeys. , 1982 .

[13]  K. Fujita Role of some physical characteristics in species recognition by pigtail monkeys , 1993, Primates.

[14]  J. Findlay,et al.  Rapid Detection of Person Information in a Naturalistic Scene , 2008, Perception.

[15]  Canan Karatekin,et al.  Eye tracking studies of normative and atypical development , 2007 .

[16]  Curtis E. Thomsen,et al.  Eye contact by non-human primates toward a human observer , 1974 .

[17]  C. Keating,et al.  Visual Scan Patterns of Rhesus Monkeys Viewing Faces , 1982, Perception.

[18]  M. Tomonaga How laboratory-raised Japanese monkeys (Macaca fuscata) perceive rotated photographs of monkeys: Evidence for an inversion effect in face perception , 1994, Primates.

[19]  R. C. Langford How People Look at Pictures, A Study of the Psychology of Perception in Art. , 1936 .

[20]  J. Henderson,et al.  The Role of Fixation Position in Detecting Scene Changes Across Saccades , 1999 .

[21]  Van Hooff,et al.  The Facial Displays of the Catarrhine Monkeys and Apes. , 1967 .

[22]  Hiromitsu Kobayashi,et al.  Unique morphology of the human eye and its adaptive meaning: comparative studies on external morphology of the primate eye. , 2001, Journal of human evolution.

[23]  Tetsuro Matsuzawa,et al.  Cognitive Development in Chimpanzees , 2021, Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Psychology.

[24]  J. Henderson,et al.  High-level scene perception. , 1999, Annual review of psychology.