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Dive into the research topics where Akiko Matsumoto-Oda is active.

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Featured researches published by Akiko Matsumoto-Oda.


International Journal of Primatology | 1998

Factors Affecting Party Size in Chimpanzees of the Mahale Mountains

Akiko Matsumoto-Oda; Kazuhiko Hosaka; Michael A. Huffman; Kenji Kawanaka

We studied factors affecting party size and composition of wild chimpanzees at Mahale (M group) over an 11-month period. Parties with 1–5 individuals were most frequent (37.8%; 153/405 parties); they included 94.7% of all male parties (n = 76) and 81.3% of all female parties (n = 75). The median of monthly values was the standard for analysis. We divided the year into four periods based on the median size of monthly bisexual parties (30.9 individuals; includes both males and females): monthly bisexual party sizes were larger in May–June (period II) and October–January (period IV) and smaller in February–April (period I) and July–September (period III). Only bisexual parties changed in size with period. The number of fruit items (=species) eaten was fewer in periods II and IV when abundance per item appeared to be great. The sizes of bisexual parties, which included cycling females with maximal anogenital swelling, were larger, and their representation (%) in all bisexual parties was greater in periods III and IV. The numbers of both cycling females and cycling females with maximal anogenital swelling were also larger in periods III and IV. The percentage of cycling females with maximal anogenital swelling was greater in periods II and III. The results of this study and those of Nishida (1979) suggest that seasonal variation in party size of Mahale chimpanzees maintains a relatively consistent annual cycle. The factors assumed to affect party sizes are fruit availability and the presence of cycling females with maximal anogenital swelling.


American Journal of Primatology | 1999

Mahale chimpanzees: grouping patterns and cycling females.

Akiko Matsumoto-Oda

The social system of chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii) is characterized by the fission‐fusion of social groups. Several studies have reported that females are less gregarious than males. In the current study, adult female gregariousness depended on their reproductive state. Noncycling adult females (pregnant, lactating, or post reproductive) were observed in large bisexual parties less often than cycling adult females. On the other hand, cycling adult females were observed in large bisexual parties as often as males, regardless of their estrous state. More males were in parties that included cycling adult females with maximal genital swelling (estrous females) than in parties without them. Moreover, a bisexual party including more estrous females contained more males. These results suggest that large bisexual parties of chimpanzees are constructed by a dual mechanism. First, cycling adult females are attracted to parties that consist of the top ranking male and large numbers of adult and adolescent males. Second, adult and adolescent males that did not belong to parties originally are attracted by estrous females and join them. Thus, in Mahale Mountains National Park, Tanzania, bisexual parties of chimpanzees can be characterized as “parties for reproduction.” Am. J. Primatol. 47:197–207, 1999.


Journal of Vision | 2009

Cross-cultural perceptions of facial resemblance between kin

Alexandra Alvergne; Ryo Oda; Charlotte Faurie; Akiko Matsumoto-Oda; Valérie Durand; Michel Raymond

Humans use facial comparisons to identify their relatives and adjust their behavior accordingly. However, the mechanisms underlying the assessment of facial similarities are poorly known. Here, we investigate the role of exposure to particular faces for the detection of facial similarities by asking judges to detect parent-child pairs using faces from different origins. In a first phase, French and Senegalese judges assessed facial resemblance in French and Senegalese families. In a second phase, Senegalese judges who had immigrated to France, as well as French and Senegalese stationary judges, were asked to rate a second set of Senegalese and French families. The judges showed no differences in their ability to detect parent-child pairs in French and Senegalese families in both the first and second phases. For judges who changed their country of residence, the answer time and duration of stay in the new country were not associated with correct assignment rates. Our results suggest that exposure has a limited role in the ability to process facial resemblance in others, which contrasts with facial recognition processing. We also discuss whether processing facial similarities is a by-product of the facial recognition system or an evolved ability to assess kinship relationships.


American Journal of Primatology | 1999

Changes in the Activity Budget of Cycling Female Chimpanzees

Akiko Matsumoto-Oda; Ryo Oda

This study is a preliminary report on the time allocated to various activities by female wild chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii) during their sexual cycle. Cycling females with maximal tumescence (estrous females) tended to spend more time moving than cycling females with quiescent sexual skin (anestrous females). Although there was no statistically significant decrease in any specific activity that corresponded to the increase in time spent moving, feeding time did decrease in four of the five females. The frequency of approach by females toward males and the frequency of approach by males toward females significantly increased when females were in estrus. Direct aggression by males occurred more frequently toward estrous females than toward anestrous females. The copulation frequency and the frequency of approach to males was not significantly correlated with the increase in time spent moving. There was a high but not significant correlation between the time spent moving and the frequency of direct aggression by males toward females. Mating effort, feeding competition, male aggression, and other possible reasons that might explain the increase in moving time are discussed. Am. J. Primatol. 46:157–166, 1998.


Biology Letters | 2009

Altruists are trusted based on non-verbal cues

Ryo Oda; Takuya Naganawa; Shinsaku Yamauchi; Noriko Yamagata; Akiko Matsumoto-Oda

The identification of altruists based on non-verbal cues might offer a solution to the problem of subtle cheating. Previous studies have indicated that the ability to discriminate altruists from non-altruists emerges during evolution. However, behavioural differences with regard to social exchanges involving altruists and non-altruists have not been studied. We investigated differences in responses to videotaped altruists and non-altruists with the Faith Game. Participants tended to entrust real money to altruists more than to non-altruists, providing strong evidence that cognitive adaptations evolve as counter-strategies to subtle cheating.


Primates | 2002

Behavioral seasonality in mahale chimpanzees

Akiko Matsumoto-Oda

To analyze how the chimpanzees in the Mahale Mountains National Park, Tanzania, change their grouping pattern, activity budget, travel speed, and travel distance within an annual cycle, I divided 1-year data into four periods. The Mahale chimpanzees have the behavioral flexibility to adapt to various climates and exhibited at least three behavioral seasons. In the early wet season, chimpanzees formed a few, large parties, and spent much time feeding on insects and animal meat. In the early and late dry seasons, chimpanzees maintained party sizes as large as in the early wet season, and traveled distances similar to the early wet season, but spent the most time feeding and traveling within the year. By contrast, in the late wet season chimpanzee parties broke up into more numerous, small groups, and traveled slowly over shorter distances. Although time spent feeding and traveling were the same as that in the early wet season, time spent feeding on terrestrial herbaceous vegetation (THV) was the highest in the year. The results suggest that chimpanzees travel longer, faster, and farther in seasons when they form large parties.


Primates | 2003

Extraordinarily low bone mineral density in an old female chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii ) from the Mahale Mountains National Park

Harumoto Gunji; Kazuhiko Hosaka; Michael A. Huffman; Kenji Kawanaka; Akiko Matsumoto-Oda; Yuzuru Hamada; Toshisada Nishida

We examined bone mineral density (BMD) of the femoral neck and lumbar vertebrae of four chimpanzee skeletons from Mahale Mountains National Park, Tanzania, and four captive ones, with a dual energy X-ray absorptiometer. The BMD of Wansombo, an old female chimpanzee from Mahale , was remarkably lower than the mean of the other six younger adult female chimpanzees and categorized as osteoporosis. Posture, locomotion, and trunk-sacral anatomy of chimpanzees may have prevented fractures in Wansombo, whose BMD was below human osteoporosis criteria.


Primates | 2007

Sniffing behaviors in Mahale chimpanzees

Akiko Matsumoto-Oda; Nobuyuki Kutsukake; Kazuhiko Hosaka; Takahisa Matsusaka

Although it is difficult for observers to determine how non-human primates use olfaction in a natural environment, sniffing is one clue. In this study, the sniffing behaviors of wild chimpanzees were divided into six categories, and sex differences were found in most categories. Males sniffed more frequently than females in sexual and social situations, while females sniffed more often during feeding and self-checking. Chimpanzees sniffed more frequently during the dry season than during the wet season, presumably due to the low humidity. This suggests that the environment affects olfactory use by chimpanzees and that chimpanzees easily gather new information from the ground via sniffing.


British Journal of Psychology | 2013

Sexually dimorphic preference for altruism in the opposite sex according to recipient.

Ryo Oda; Akinori Shibata; Toko Kiyonari; Mia Takeda; Akiko Matsumoto-Oda

Sexual selection may affect human altruistic behaviour. Evolutionary psychology predicts that human mate preference reflects sexual selection. We investigated sex differences in preference for opposite-sex altruism according to recipient because the reasons for altruistic behaviour differ according to the relationship between actor and recipient. We employed the Self-Report Altruism Scale Distinguished by the Recipient, which was newly developed to evaluate altruism among Japanese undergraduates. We asked participants to evaluate preferences for each item based on the recipient of the altruistic behaviour (family members, friends or acquaintances, and strangers). Preference for opposite-sex altruism differed according to recipient, gender of the participant, and relationship type, and several significant interactions were observed among these factors. We suggest that whereas women use a potential partners altruism towards strangers as a costly signal of their resource-holding potential when choosing a mate, they consider altruism towards family when they are in a long-term relationship to ensure that resources are not allocated to non-relatives.


Folia Primatologica | 1998

Injuries to the Sexual Skin of Female Chimpanzees at Mahale and Their Effect on Behaviour

Akiko Matsumoto-Oda

Swellings of the perineal or paracallosal area occur in a number of primate species and are most pronounced in the middle of the menstrual cycle. Female chimpanzees are in maximal swelling (approx. 1,400 cm3 [1]) for 10 days of their 36-day sexual cycle [2, 3]. The evolutionary advantages of the sexual swelling as a signal of reproductive state are a possible increase in mating opportunities [4, 5], induction of mating competition between males [6] and advertisement for a female’s likely period of conception [7]. The immediate disadvantages of swellings, however, have received little attention. The conspicuously large swelling attracts the attention of males who direct their aggressive displays at oestrous females [8]. Thus, sexual swellings are easily susceptible to injury [6] and positional behaviours, such as sitting, become more difficult [8]. What is the price paid for this costly advertisement? There are no detailed reports available describing how frequent such injuries are and what damage they cause. To re-examine the immediate disadvantages of sexual swellings, I analyse the symptoms of injury, change in copulation frequency and duration of maximal swelling.

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Ryo Oda

Nagoya Institute of Technology

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Kenji Kawanaka

Okayama University of Science

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