Slocombe Katie E, Zuberbühler Klaus
School of Psychology, University of St. Andrews, St. Andrews, Scotland.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2007 Oct 23;104(43):17228-33. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0706741104. Epub 2007 Oct 17.
Wild chimpanzees produce acoustically distinct scream vocalizations depending on their social role during agonistic interactions with other group members. Here, we show that victims during such agonistic interactions alter the acoustic structure of their screams depending on the severity of aggression experienced, providing nearby listeners with important cues about the nature of the attack. However, we also found that victims of severe attacks produced screams that significantly exaggerated the true level of aggression experienced, but they did so only if there was at least one listener in the audience who matched or surpassed the aggressor in rank. Our results are consistent with the more general hypothesis that chimpanzees possess sophisticated understanding of third-party relationships, so-called triadic awareness, and that this knowledge influences their vocal production.
野生黑猩猩在与其他群体成员进行争斗互动时,会根据自己的社会角色发出声学上不同的尖叫叫声。在此,我们表明,在这种争斗互动中,受害者会根据所经历攻击的严重程度改变其尖叫的声学结构,为附近的听众提供有关攻击性质的重要线索。然而,我们还发现,严重攻击的受害者发出的尖叫显著夸大了实际经历的攻击程度,但只有当观众中至少有一名听众在等级上与攻击者相当或超过攻击者时,他们才会这样做。我们的结果与更普遍的假设一致,即黑猩猩对第三方关系有着复杂的理解,即所谓的三元意识,并且这种认知会影响它们的发声。