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Copycat monkeys: macaque babies ape adults' facial feats.


Scientists for the first time have established that for a brief period after birth, baby monkeys imitate facial movements made by people and adult monkeys. This copycat capacity, until now observed only in human and chimpanzee infants, seems to have evolved in all these primates as a way to jump-start newborns' face-to-face communication with adults, say evolutionary biologist Pier F. Ferrari of the University of Parma History
The school was founded during XI century [1]as a center for study of the general liberal arts curriculum of the medieval period. The faculties of law and medicine were added in thirteenth century.
 in Italy and his colleagues.

Between 3 and 7 days afterbirth afterbirth /af·ter·birth/ (af´ter-birth?) the placenta and membranes delivered from the uterus after childbirth.

af·ter·birth
n.
, macaque macaque (məkäk`), name for Old World monkeys of the genus Macaca, related to mangabeys, mandrills, and baboons. All but one of the 19 species are found in Asia from Afghanistan to Japan, the Philippines, and Borneo.  babies smacked their lips and stuck out their tongues just as an experimenter did, the researchers report in the September PLoS Biology. Adult macaques make these facial gestures during friendly or cooperative interactions, such as mutual grooming.

The baby monkeys stared impassively im·pas·sive  
adj.
1. Devoid of or not subject to emotion.

2. Revealing no emotion; expressionless.

3. Archaic Incapable of physical sensation.

4. Motionless; still.
 when experimenters opened and closed their mouths or fight hands. A rotating, colored disk about the size of a face also elicited no reaction.

Preliminary observations of free-ranging macaques by Ferrari's group further suggest that newborns mimic their mothers' lip smacking smack·ing  
adj.
Brisk; vigorous; spanking: a smacking breeze.

Noun 1. smacking - the act of smacking something; a blow delivered with an open hand
slap, smack
 and tongue protrusion protrusion /pro·tru·sion/ (-troo´zhun)
1. extension beyond the usual limits, or above a plane surface.

2. the state of being thrust forward or laterally, as in masticatory movements of the mandible.
.

"I think that [infant] imitation developed in species in which face-to-face communication predominates over other channels of communication," Ferrari says.

Researchers have generally held that imitation in the service of social learning occurs only in people and apes. Ferrari's team questioned that assumption after the recent discovery in macaque brains of mirror neurons. These cells, also found in people, vigorously react both when an individual performs an action and when he or she watches it being executed by another (SN: 5/24/03, p. 330).

The scientists tested 21 baby macaques at 1, 3, 7,14, and 30 days after birth. In each session, an experimenter held an infant monkey at face level and briefly exhibited a neutral expression. A random series of displays then followed, consisting of tongue protrusion, mouth opening, lip smacking, hand opening, and disk spinning, each separated by a return of the neutral expression.

Many day-old infants smacked their lips frequently after viewing a mouth opening and closing, but they didn't mimic what they had seen.

Of 16 macaque babies tested when 3 days old, 13 copied tongue protrusions, lip smacking, or both. By day 7, imitation of the experimenter had largely disappeared except for continued mimicry mimicry, in biology, the advantageous resemblance of one species to another, often unrelated, species or to a feature of its own environment. (When the latter results from pigmentation it is classed as protective coloration.  of lip smacking by 4 animals. By day 14, all imitation had stopped.

It's not clear why some babies, whether macaque, chimp, or human, fail to imitate facial gestures, Ferrari says. His team plans to track the monkeys into adulthood to see whether the imitators and the others later differ in temperamental or sensory traits. The team will also examine whether infant monkeys that imitate develop any special social or cognitive abilities later on.

In contrast to macaques, human and chimp babies typically begin mimicry at 2 to 3 weeks of age and continue for several months, as infants become emotionally tuned to their mothers. Macaque imitation occurs in a briefer time span because these primates grow up and gravitate grav·i·tate  
intr.v. grav·i·tat·ed, grav·i·tat·ing, grav·i·tates
1. To move in response to the force of gravity.

2. To move downward.

3.
 into a social network much faster than people or apes do, Ferrari surmises.

Psychologist Kim A. Bard of the University of Portsmouth Portsmouth seems better placed than most Post-1992 universities to deal with the surge of applications encouraged by the government's target that 50% of those under-35 should experience Higher Education at some point in their life.  in England calls the new report "simply a terrific study." Investigators can now determine in various monkey species whether the first week of life represents a critical period for learning via imitation, says Bard, who has studied imitation among chimp infants.

"We have not yet tapped the full extent of imitative im·i·ta·tive  
adj.
1. Of or involving imitation.

2. Not original; derivative.

3. Tending to imitate.

4. Onomatopoeic.
 abilities in nonhuman primates" she says.
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Author:Bower, B.
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:4EUIT
Date:Sep 9, 2006
Words:564
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