Newborn monkeys smile in their sleep just like babies do !
For the first time, baby Japanese macaques have been seen spontaneously smiling.
When a newborn baby appears to smile for the first time it is perhaps one of the most rewarding experiences a new parent has.Of
course, the baby is probably not smiling in response to a social
trigger. An apparent "smile" in the earliest days might simply be
an unintentional change in facial expressions. In 1959 a
researcher called Peter Wolff called these "spontaneous neonatal
smiles". They involve, he wrote, a "slow, gentle, sideward, and upward
pull of the mouth, without rhythmical mouthing movements or contraction
of other facial muscles".In fact, this type of spontaneous smile often happens during sleep. However, the cause of these neonatal smiles is unclear.
Japanese macaques show many different expressions
We now know that humans are not alone in this seemingly innate reaction. A decade ago it was discovered that chimpanzee babies show similar spontaneous smiles.Chimps are one of our closest living relatives in the animal kingdom
today. As we share a common ancestor with them, which lived between six and 13 million years ago, the finding suggests that smiling goes back to at least that far.A team led by Fumito Kawakami of Kyoto University's Primate Research Institute in Japan, has now discovered that spontaneous smiles go back even further. "Infant
Japanese macaques are super-cute and their facial configuration is
almost the same as humans," says Kawakami. "So when I observed this
smiling in an infant macaque, I simply thought 'oh this is the same as
humans'."
Spontaneous smiles often occur during irregular sleep or drowsiness
After noticing some smiles while performing health checks on the macaques, he wanted to uncover whether it was more common.To do so, his team monitored seven newborn Japanese macaques.
They all showed spontaneous smiles at least once, within an hour of
observation. In all cases they were in a state of REM (rapid eye
movement) sleep. The monkeys ranged in age between four and 21 days old. In all, they produced a total of 58 spontaneous smiles. This suggests that these smiles are not rare, the researchers say."If
we can observe the same behavior in more distant relatives [such as]
Japanese macaques, we can infer that the origin of smiling goes back to
around 30 million years," Kawakami says. In turn, this can help us to
understand more about spontaneous smiling in humans.
Neutral (top) versus spontaneous smiles (bottom) in Japanese macaques
Kawakami and colleagues have published their observations in the journal Primates.This research shows that the first developmental stage of smiling is
shared by humans, apes and monkeys. "After that, only humans use those
facial expressions in various contexts," says Kawakami.The finding also implies that smiling is innate, which would make sense as it is so fundamental to our social world.Japanese
macaques are only the third species observed producing these neonatal
smiles. But that does not mean the smiles are unique to these species:
it may simply be that nobody has yet noticed other species producing
them. "There are case reports about mice laughing when they get
tickled and dogs displaying facial expressions of pleasure," says
co-author Masaki Tomonaga. "It may be the case that many mammal infants
display spontaneous smiles, in which case smiling would have an older
evolutionary origin."
Chimpanzee infants also show spontaneous smiles
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