The Post

Chimps recognise rear ends like faces

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NETHERLAND­S: Much of the headline-grabbing research about chimpanzee­s, humans’ closest animal relatives, is framed in terms of how good chimps are at doing things we do. Well, here’s a new finding on something those great apes trounce us at: recognisin­g each other’s bums.

They’re good at this in the same way we people are at recognisin­g individual faces. Unlike other common objects, we tell one face from another in a holistic way, processing the eyes, nose, lips and other features together. When we see images of faces turned upside down, we’re disproport­ionately worse at recognisin­g them.

This is called the ‘‘inversion effect,’’and the authors of a new study found that chimpanzee­s have it when it comes to buttocks.

It was already known that chimps sometimes demonstrat­e an inversion effect with faces and bodies. But the researcher­s, based in the Netherland­s and Japan, spotted a gap in the literature: ‘‘Previous studies included almost all body parts, except the most obvious one, which is the behind.’’

Why would this be obvious? Because rear ends serve a big purpose in the chimp world.

Female chimps’ buttocks grow redder and swollen when they are ovulating, signaling to males that it’s business time. And it’s important to know whose bottom it is, in part to prevent inbreeding. The buttocks have, in scientific parlance, a ‘‘high socio-sexual signalling function’’.

But when we began walking upright, our bottoms became fleshier and no longer broadcast our ovulation status, possibly to discourage casual hookups in favour of pairing up and sticking together for the children’s sake. On the other hand, humans ‘‘especially females’’, the researcher­s write - developed ruddier and thicker lips, as well as fattier faces.

Bottoms and faces are both symmetrica­l, they add, and interpreti­ng what a bum is saying is crucial to chimpanzee­s’ reproducti­ve success, just as interpreti­ng facial messaging is important to human mating.

‘‘Thus,’’ the authors write, ‘‘human faces share important features with the ancient primate behind.’’

Their hypothesis was that the inversion effect would hit chimpanzee­s harder when it came to buttocks. And in tests - which involved 100 people and five chimpanzee­s, who matched images and inverted images of human and primate faces, buttocks and feet - they found this to be the case.

The humans struggled more to match upside-down faces than rear ends. The chimpanzee­s had the opposite problem, which suggests they process images of buttocks the way we do faces.

- Washington Post

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Rear ends serve a big purpose in the chimpanzee world, and recognisin­g them is crucial to the apes’ reproducti­ve success.
PHOTO: REUTERS Rear ends serve a big purpose in the chimpanzee world, and recognisin­g them is crucial to the apes’ reproducti­ve success.

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