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Taste-induced facial expressions in apes and humans

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Human Evolution

Abstract

Different gustatory stimuli activate distinct, stereotyped motorbehaviors of the orofacial region. These serve as nonverbal communicational signs, indicative of both intensity and hedonics of the perceived sensation. The present study aims to compare these orofacial motor-coordinations of apes with those of perinatal human infants. A group of 27 infants, prior to their first feeding-experience, as well as a group of 14 apes were tested. Video-recorded documentation of stimulation and stimulus-dependent responses for both groups were evaluated in a blind-setting. Overall hedonic ratings and semiquantitative analysis of the motion-features composing the facial expressions served as critical measures. Results revealed a sizeable correlation between mean hedonic ratings ascribed to the different responses of neonates and of apes. The semiquantitative analysis shows that sweet-, water- and bitter-stimuli activate almost identical motion-features in the orofacial regions of both groups tested. Findings also correlate with those obtained in testing adolescent, adult and elderly human examinees.

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Steiner, J.E., Glaser, D. Taste-induced facial expressions in apes and humans. Hum. Evol. 10, 97–105 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02437533

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02437533

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