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Author Notes:

Author for correspondence (matthew.campbell@emory.edu).

Subject:

Research Funding:

This work was supported by Emory's College of Arts and Sciences, the Living Links Center, as well as the base grant of the National Institutes of Health (USA) no. RR-00165 to the Yerkes NPRC.

Keywords:

  • contagious yawning
  • chimpanzees
  • computer animations
  • empathy

Computer animations stimulate contagious yawning in chimpanzees

Tools:

Journal Title:

Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences

Volume:

Volume 276, Number 1676

Publisher:

, Pages 4255-4259

Type of Work:

Article | Post-print: After Peer Review

Abstract:

People empathize with fictional displays of behaviour, including those of cartoons and computer animations, even though the stimuli are obviously artificial. However, the extent to which other animals also may respond empathetically to animations has yet to be determined. Animations provide a potentially useful tool for exploring non-human behaviour, cognition and empathy because computer-generated stimuli offer complete control over variables and the ability to program stimuli that could not be captured on video. Establishing computer animations as a viable tool requires that non-human subjects identify with and respond to animations in a way similar to the way they do to images of actual conspecifics. Contagious yawning has been linked to empathy and poses a good test of involuntary identification and motor mimicry. We presented 24 chimpanzees with three-dimensional computer-animated chimpanzees yawning or displaying control mouth movements. The apes yawned significantly more in response to the yawn animations than to the controls, implying identification with the animations. These results support the phenomenon of contagious yawning in chimpanzees and suggest an empathic response to animations. Understanding how chimpanzees connect with animations, to both empathize and imitate, may help us to understand how humans do the same.

Copyright information:

© 2009 The Royal Society

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