Skip to main content
Kyoto University » Primatology and Wildlife Research

Search form

CICASP | Center for International Collaboration and Advanced Studies in Primatology

  • About CICASP
  • Admissions
    • Graduate Course
    • Application
    • FAQ
    • Other Programs
    • Funding
    • Testimonials
    Stay
  • Research Units
  • People
    • CICASP Staff
    • Students
    • Alumni
    Stay
  • Education

    View: Education

    • Fundamental Lectures
    • Inuyama Nerds
    • Other Educational Events
    • Sci Comm Workshops
    Stay
  • News & Media
    • Announcements
    • Articles
    • Events
    • Interviews
    • Podcasts
    • Publications
    Stay
  • Campus Life
    • Around Inuyama
    • Around Nagoya
    • Festivals
    • On Campus
    Stay
  • Contact
HomeNewsPublications
  • November 24th 2023

    From Cacophony to Symphony: The Harmonious Interplay of Animal Cognition and Communication with Dr. Tecumseh Fitch

    Listen
  • November 5th 2023
    Laura Buck with a Schematic of her research being done at Kyoto University

    Unraveling the Secrets of Cold Adaptation and Hybridization in Primates with Evolutionary Anthropologist Dr. Laura Buck

    Listen
  • October 25th 2023
    urban macaques on motorbike (left) and primatologist Paula Pebsworth (right)

    Exploring Human-Primate Coexistence with Dr. Paula Pebsworth: A Journey from the Vineyards of Napa Valley to the Wilds of Africa, Asia and Beyond

    Listen
  • September 27th 2023

    Change: Primate Populations in an Anthropogenic World with Primatologist and Conservation Biologist Dr. Colin Chapman

    Listen
  • September 27th 2023

    Understanding the Ins and Outs of Tool Use in Capuchin Monkeys with Professor Patricia Izar

    Listen
  • August 8th 2023
    Reggie and undergraduate students at Arashiyama, Kyoto, Japan

    Exploring Comparative Primate Cognition with Dr. Reggie Gazes and Dr. Ikuma Adachi

    Listen
  • July 20th 2023

    From Gorillas to Elephants: Dr. Ian Redmond on Wildlife Conservation in Africa

    Listen
  • July 19th 2023

    The PrimateCast 83: Journey into the Wild with The Orangutan Conservation Project's Leif Cocks

    Listen
  • July 19th 2023

    The PrimateCast Origins (82): Tarzan meets Darwin in conservation and evolution with conservationist and evolutionary biologist Dr. Fred Bercovitch

    Listen
  • June 9th 2023

    The PrimateCast 81: Born Free USA's Devan Schowe on animal advocacy, ethics, welfare and conservation in the USA

    Listen
  • April 21st 2023

    The PrimateCast Origins (80): Walking with gorillas and Dr. Gladys Kalema-Zikusoka, Uganda's first wildlife veterinarian

    Listen
  • March 29th 2023

    The PrimateCast 79: Dr. Tesla Monson on what teeth can tell us about the life histories and behavior of extinct species (and cool science communication!)

    Listen

The PrimateCast

The PrimateCast - Podcast
Catch interviews from the world of primatology, wildlife science and beyond with The PrimateCast. Available here or on iTunes. Subscribe to our rss feed, add us on iTunes and follow us on social media at Facebook and Twitter @ThePrimateCast. View all Podcasts
Subscribe to The PrimateCast
 
 
iTunes Channel
 

Topics

  • Announcements (23)
  • Articles (3)
  • Events (34)
  • Interviews (1)
  • Podcasts (92)
  • Publications (28)

Recent News

Virtual Open Campus 2025
November 26th 2024
Read More >
International Primatology Lecture 27: Dr. Jörg Ganzhorn
November 8th 2024
Read More >
Mike Huffman Kick Off Retirement event banner
A Kick Off Event: Learning to be a Monkey Part II with Dr. Michael A. Huffman
March 27th 2024
Read More >
View all News ›

Monthly Archive

  • November 2024 (2)
  • March 2024 (1)
  • February 2024 (1)
  • January 2024 (1)
  • November 2023 (2)
  • October 2023 (3)

Follow Us

Developmental processes in face perception

April 23rd 2013
Publications
Developmental processes in face perception

A new study published in the journal Scientific Reports uses well-controlled experiments on our closest relatives, the chimpanzees, to highlight important implications concerning how we humans develop our face perception system.

For primates, the ability to distinguish between individuals primarily relies on face recognition. However, the extents to which developmental processes contribute to face perception remain relatively unclear. This new study, led by JSPS Postdoctoral Fellow Dr. Christoph Dahl and CICASP’s own Dr. Ikuma Adachi, took advantage of the peculiar fact that chimpanzees at the Kyoto University Primate Research Institute have had life-long exposure to non-conspecific faces at distinctive levels of experience which varied by age to disentangle these developmental components in face recognition. They found an advantage in the ability of young chimpanzees to discriminate chimpanzee before human faces, reflecting a predominant contribution of an early component driving the perceptual system towards conspecific morphology. In stark contrast, old chimpanzees were better able to discriminate human over chimpanzee faces, reflecting a predominant late component shaping the perceptual system along the critical dimensions of the faces typically exposed to. The study also simulates the relative contributions of these early and late components using computational modeling and mathematically describes their underlying functions.

For more information, access the article here at Scientific Reports.

Navigation

  • About
  • Program
  • People
  • News & Media
  • Campus Life
  • Contact

Follow Us

^Top

Contact Information

CICASP, Kyoto University (Inuyama Campus), 41-2 Kanrin, Inuyama, Aichi 484-8506, Japan
Phone: +81 (0)568-63-0284
Fax: +81 (0)568-61-1050
Email: cicasp [at] mail2 [dot] adm [dot] kyoto-u [dot] ac [dot] jp

© 2025 Center for International Collaboration and Advanced Studies in Primatology, Primate Research Institute, Kyoto University