» Articles » PMID: 39550634

Teeth Baring As a Model to Understand Complex Facial Signals in a Tolerant Macaque Species

Overview
Journal Am J Primatol
Date 2024 Nov 17
PMID 39550634
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Facial communication regulates many aspects of social life in human and nonhuman primates. Empirically identifying distinct facial expressions and their underlying functions can help illuminate the evolution of species' communicative complexity. We focused on bared-teeth faces (BTFs), a highly versatile facial expression in the tolerant macaque Macaca tonkeana. By employing a diverse array of techniques (MaqFACS, unsupervised cluster analysis, Levenshtein distance, NetFACS), we quantitatively discriminated two distinct BTFs: bared-teeth (BT) and open mouth bared-teeth (OMBT), and evaluated their distribution across peaceful, playful, and agonistic contexts. Neither BT nor OMBT were context-specific, although BT frequently occurred during peaceful interactions and with low levels of stereotypy. OMBT was highly stereotyped during play, a context involving strong unpredictability. The presence of tongue-protrusion during OMBT was exclusive to peaceful contexts whereas the presence of glabella-lowering during BT and OMBT was specific to agonistic contexts. Hence, BT and OMBT per se are not context-specific, but their contextual relevance hinges on the inclusion of specific key elements. Moving forward, concurrent analyses of stereotypy and specificity should extend beyond our study to encompass other primate and non-primate species, facilitating direct comparisons and revealing how communicative and social complexity coevolve.

References
1.
Freeberg T, Dunbar R, Ord T . Social complexity as a proximate and ultimate factor in communicative complexity. Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2012; 367(1597):1785-801. PMC: 3367695. DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2011.0213. View

2.
Bresciani C, Cordoni G, Palagi E . Playing together, laughing together: rapid facial mimicry and social sensitivity in lowland gorillas. Curr Zool. 2022; 68(5):560-569. PMC: 9616060. DOI: 10.1093/cz/zoab092. View

3.
Buck R . Social and emotional functions in facial expression and communication: the readout hypothesis. Biol Psychol. 1994; 38(2-3):95-115. DOI: 10.1016/0301-0511(94)90032-9. View

4.
Preuschoft S, van Hooff J . Homologizing primate facial displays: a critical review of methods. Folia Primatol (Basel). 1995; 65(3):121-37. DOI: 10.1159/000156878. View

5.
Julle-Daniere E, Micheletta J, Whitehouse J, Joly M, Gass C, Burrows A . MaqFACS (Macaque Facial Action Coding System) can be used to document facial movements in Barbary macaques (Macaca sylvanus). PeerJ. 2015; 3:e1248. PMC: 4579026. DOI: 10.7717/peerj.1248. View