Unlike other primates, the whites human eyes contrast sharply with our
colored irises and dark pupils. One theory suggests that our eyes
evolved this way specifically to make it easier to figure out the
direction of another person's gaze. If this theory is correct, you
would expect humans to pay more attention to eye orientation than other
primates do.



To find out, researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary
Anthropology <http://www.eva.mpg.de>   in Leipzig compared the behavior
of adult chimps, gorillas, bonobos and human children.



A person stood in front of the ape or child and looked up and to the
sides, either moving only his head, only his eyes, or both his head and
eyes. Apes and children both looked where they thought the experimenter
was looking. But the apes paid the most attention to the motion of the
head, whereas the children paid the most attention to the motion of the
eyes.



But why would humans evolve easy-to-read eyes? For other primates,
camouflaged eye movements clearly serve a purpose. "For non-humans
primates, you don't want anybody to see what you're looking at.
You want to eat it, or mate it, or chase it," state Brian Hare
<http://www.eva.mpg.de/%7Ehare>  , a biological anthropologist who
co-authored the paper. Instead Hare says we evolved to make it easy for
everyone to see where we were looking. The advantages of cooperation
through mutual gaze must have been so great that they outweighed the
advantage of a poker face.






Happy Learning,

Yovan P. Putra

www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com/>

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