Title (en)
Experimental evidence that uniformly white sclera enhances the visibility of eye-gaze direction in humans and chimpanzees
Language
English
Description (en)
Hallmark social activities of humans, such as cooperation and cultural learning, involve eye-gaze signaling through joint attentional interaction and ostensive communication. The gaze-signaling and related cooperative-eye hypotheses posit that humans evolved unique external eye morphologies, including uniformly white sclera (the whites of the eye), to enhance the visibility of eye-gaze for conspecifics. However, experimental evidence is still lacking. This study tested the ability of human and chimpanzee participants to discriminate the eye-gaze directions of human and chimpanzee images in computerized tasks. We varied the level of brightness and size in the stimulus images to examine the robustness of the eye-gaze directional signal against simulated shading and distancing. We found that both humans and chimpanzees discriminated eye-gaze directions of humans better than those of chimpanzees, particularly in visually challenging conditions. Also, participants of both species discriminated the eye-gaze directions of chimpanzees better when the contrast polarity of the chimpanzee eye was reversed compared to when it was normal; namely, when the chimpanzee eye has human-like white sclera and a darker iris. Uniform whiteness in the sclera thus facilitates the visibility of eye-gaze direction even across species. Our findings thus support but also critically update the central premises of the gaze-signaling hypothesis.
Keywords (en)
Great Apes; Pan-Troglodytes; Human Infants; Sequence Divergence; Unique Morphology; Visual-Acuity; Follow Gaze; Attention; Contact; Classification
DOI
10.7554/eLife.74086
Author of the digital object
Fumihiro Kano (University of Konstanz / Kyoto University / Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior)
Yuri Kawaguchi (University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna / Kyoto University)
Yeow Hanling (Kyoto University)
Format
application/pdf
Size
1.8 MB
Licence Selected
Type of publication
Article
Name of Publication (en)
eLife
Pages or Volume
30
Volume
11
Publisher
eLife Sciences Publications Ltd
Publication Date
2022
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Persistent identifier
DOI
https://phaidra.vetmeduni.ac.at/o:1802
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.74086 - Content
- DetailsObject typePDFDocumentFormatapplication/pdfCreated04.07.2023 07:59:19 UTC
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