Most primates live in social groups which survival and stability depend on
individuals' abilities to create strong social relationships with other group
members. The existence of those groups requires to identify individuals and to
assign to each of them a social status. Individual recognition can be achieved
through vocalizations but also through faces. In humans, an efficient system
for the processing of own species faces exists. This specialization is achieved
through experience with faces of conspecifics during development and leads to
the loss of ability to process faces from other primate species. We hypothesize
that a similar mechanism exists in social primates. We investigated face
processing in one Old World species (genus Macaca) and in one New World species
(genus Cebus). Our results show the same advantage for own species face
recognition for all tested subjects. This work suggests in all species tested
the existence of a common trait inherited from the primate ancestor: an
efficient system to identify individual faces of own species only