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June 13, 2025

Facial action coding now covers bonobos, offering further insights into primate communication

Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain
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Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

Researchers have successfully adapted a standardized system for analyzing facial expressions to include bonobos, our closest living relatives, alongside chimpanzees.

The study, led by an international team of scientists from multiple institutions including Leipzig University and the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, extends the Chimpanzee Facial Action Coding System (ChimpFACS) to another species closely related to humans and chimpanzees, .

The research has been published in PeerJ.

The research confirms that bonobos possess a repertoire of 28 distinct facial movements, including 22 specific muscle actions, demonstrating facial expression capabilities comparable to their chimpanzee cousins. This finding provides for understanding how these endangered great apes communicate and express themselves.

"This adaptation of ChimpFACS for bonobos fills an important gap in our ability to study across different primate species," explains lead researcher Dr. Catia Correia-Caeiro. "We can now systematically compare facial movements between humans, chimpanzees, and bonobos, offering insights into the evolution of facial communication."

The study revealed that while bonobos show fewer facial movements than humans, they share all the facial movements observed in chimpanzees. This similarity suggests the importance of facial communication in both species' social interactions.

The new coding system has practical applications beyond academic research. "This tool will be particularly valuable for assessing the welfare of bonobos in human care," notes Dr. Correia-Caeiro. "By better understanding their facial expressions, we can more accurately gauge their and well-being."

The research represents a collaboration between scientists from institutions across Germany, Switzerland, France, the United States, and the United Kingdom, including the Berlin Zoo and Harvard University.

The study builds on the widely recognized Facial Action Coding System (FACS), originally developed for humans and previously adapted for nine other species. This extension to include bonobos provides a standardized method for measuring and comparing facial movements across different primate species.

More information: Adapting the facial action coding system for chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) to bonobos (Pan paniscus): the ChimpFACS extension for bonobos, PeerJ (2025).

Journal information: PeerJ

Provided by PeerJ

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The facial action coding system has been expanded to include bonobos, identifying 28 distinct facial movements and 22 specific muscle actions. Bonobos exhibit facial expression capabilities similar to chimpanzees, supporting systematic comparisons among humans, chimpanzees, and bonobos. This advancement enables improved understanding of primate communication and welfare assessment.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.