McComb Karen, Semple Stuart
Department of Psychology, School of Life Sciences, University of Sussex, Brighton BN1 9QG, UK.
Biol Lett. 2005 Dec 22;1(4):381-5. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2005.0366.
Understanding the rules that link communication and social behaviour is an essential prerequisite for discerning how a communication system as complex as human language might have evolved. The comparative method offers a powerful tool for investigating the nature of these rules, since it provides a means to examine relationships between changes in communication abilities and changes in key aspects of social behaviour over evolutionary time. Here we present empirical evidence from phylogenetically controlled analyses indicating that evolutionary increases in the size of the vocal repertoire among non-human primate species were associated with increases in both group size and time spent grooming (our measure of extent of social bonding).
理解将交流与社会行为联系起来的规则,是洞察像人类语言这样复杂的交流系统可能如何演化的必要前提。比较方法为研究这些规则的本质提供了一个强大的工具,因为它提供了一种手段,来检验在进化时间里交流能力的变化与社会行为关键方面的变化之间的关系。在这里,我们展示了来自系统发育控制分析的实证证据,表明非人类灵长类物种中发声 repertoire 大小的进化增加与群体大小的增加以及用于梳理毛发的时间增加(我们衡量社会联系程度的指标)相关联。