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  Newsmakers   Monkeys and humans share staring behaviour

Monkeys and humans share staring behaviour

PTI
Published : May 16, 2016, 6:31 am IST
Updated : May 16, 2016, 6:31 am IST

Like humans, monkeys exhibit the same pattern of following another’s gaze throughout their lives, suggesting the behaviour is deeply rooted in our evolutionary past, according to a new study.

15MONKEY.jpg
 15MONKEY.jpg

Like humans, monkeys exhibit the same pattern of following another’s gaze throughout their lives, suggesting the behaviour is deeply rooted in our evolutionary past, according to a new study.

Following another’s gaze is a hallmark of human learning and socialisation from infancy to old age.

“Gaze-following is a crucial developmental pathway, which lays foundation

for acquiring language and interacting socially,” said Laurie Santos, psychologist at Yale University in the US.

“Here we find that gaze-following emerges in the same way in a species with an entirely different life history,” said Santos.

Santos, Alexandra Rosati of Harvard University, Michael Platt of Univer-sity of Pennsylvania (UPenn), and colleagues tested how 481 rhesus monkeys living in a preserve responded to the upward glance of a researcher.

As with most human babies, infant monkeys began gaze-following from a very early age.

However, they tended to take more looks than human babies do to find out what the researcher was looking at, even after three or four glances showed nothing of interest. By their juvenile years, monkeys became more flexible in their gaze-following and became habituated to repeated gazes over time.

During adulthood, monkeys’ responses were more varied, and they began showing human-like sex differences, with females responding to gazes more than males. Older monkeys — like older humans — then became less sensitive to gaze cues overall.

Location: United States, Washington