Eek, a snake!
Humans may be hard-wired to spot serpents and fast.
Snakes
have been preying on primates and their ancestors for more than 100
million years. The first to do so were constrictors, which squeeze their
victims to death. Several million years later, venomous snakes appeared
and began immobilizing their targets via their sharp fangs.
We humans are primates, of course, and scientists believe this long history of danger from snakes has given us a built-in fear of the reptiles and very good snake-spotting skills. The idea that primates’ brains and visual systems evolved to be
hypersensitive even to camouflaged snakes — increasing our chances of
survival — is known as the Snake Detection Theory, and it’s been demonstrated in several studies.
In visual search experiments, for example, people pick out snake photos faster than they do spider images, and far faster than they do pictures of innocuous things like fruits or flowers. This superior snake-seeing and -fearing is true even for kids who don’t have a lot of experience with snakes, as well as for monkeys raised in captivity who had never encountered a snake.
Charles Darwin carried out a highly nonscientific test on himself during a visit to the London Zoological Gardens in 1872. “I put my face close to the thick glass-plate in front
of a puff adder . . . with the firm determination of not starting back
if the snake struck at me,” he later wrote. “But as soon as the blow was struck, my resolution went for nothing,
and I jumped a yard or two backwards with astonishing rapidity. My will
and reason were powerless against the imagination of a danger which had
never been experienced.”
A new study published in PLOS ONE lends further credence to the idea that we are programmed to spot snakes — and fast. Using an image-manipulation tool, researchers
presented people with a series of 20 images of a snake, bird, cat or
fish that ranged from totally blurry to absolutely clear.
“In
the images, the animals are ‘camouflaged’ in a uniform way,
representing typical conditions in which animals are encountered in the
wild,” co-author Nobuyuki Kawai said in a statement. Here’s the series that reveals a cute and harmless (to us humans, anyway) kitty:
And here’s the series featuring that scary snake:
Participants
were able to identify snakes pretty well by the sixth image, and with a
rate of 90 percent by the eighth. The other, harmless animals weren’t
generally made out until the 10th image or later. Participants had the
toughest time identifying birds, which the authors said required further
study to explain.
“This suggests that humans are primed to pick out snakes even in dense undergrowth, in a way that isn’t activated for other animals that aren’t a threat,” said another co-author, Hongshen He.
Source: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/animalia/wp/2016/11/10/eek-a-snake-humans-may-be-hard-wired-to-spot-serpents-and-fast/?tid=sm_tw
Humans may be hard-wired to spot serpents and fast.
We humans are primates, of course, and scientists believe this long history of danger from snakes has given us a built-in fear of the reptiles and very good snake-spotting skills.
In visual search experiments, for example, people pick out snake photos faster than they do spider images, and far faster than they do pictures of innocuous things like fruits or flowers. This superior snake-seeing and -fearing is true even for kids who don’t have a lot of experience with snakes, as well as for monkeys raised in captivity who had never encountered a snake.
Charles Darwin carried out a highly nonscientific test on himself during a visit to the London Zoological Gardens in 1872.
A new study published in PLOS ONE lends further credence to the idea that we are programmed to spot snakes — and fast.
And here’s the series featuring that scary snake:
“This suggests that humans are primed to pick out snakes even in dense undergrowth, in a way that isn’t activated for other animals that aren’t a threat,” said another co-author, Hongshen He.
Source: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/animalia/wp/2016/11/10/eek-a-snake-humans-may-be-hard-wired-to-spot-serpents-and-fast/?tid=sm_tw
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