Perception of pictorial eye-gaze by baboons (papio papio)

Fagot, J. & Deruelle, C. (2002). Perception of pictorial eye-gaze by baboons (Papio papio). Journal of Experimental Psychology : Animal Behavior Processes, 28, 298-309

 

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Abstract -Pictorial faces looking left or right were presented to baboons (Papio papio) before the display of a target letter in the left or fight hemifield of a monitor screen. Baboons had to provide go or no-go responses taking into account the identity of the target letter. The 1st 6 experiments showed no reliable effect of eye gaze on discrimination speed, using either schematic gazes or pictures of real gazes. Experiment 7 showed that eye gazes facilitated target processing when eye cues were perfect predictors of target location. Findings suggest that baboons do not spontaneously process eye-gaze direction but can learn to do so if the gaze has a predictive value. Implications of these findings on baboons’ perspective-taking abilities are discussed.
 

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