Behaviour and Evolution Research Group, Department of Psychology, University of Stirling, Stirling, Scotland.
Am J Primatol. 2010 Jun;72(6):549-58. doi: 10.1002/ajp.20805.
Researchers have demonstrated the neighbor effect for affiliative and agonistic neighbor vocalizations in captive chimpanzees. We extend the investigation of the neighbor effect to New World monkeys, Callithrix jacchus. We collected data on vocalizations and behaviors of 31 focal individuals and concurrent neighbor vocalization within three behavioral categories: intragroup and intergroup aggression and intragroup affiliation. We investigated whether there was an influence of neighbor vocalizations on focal behavior within the same behavioral category. For data analysis we used approximate randomization of paired-sample t-tests. We found that marmosets performed intergroup aggressive behavior (bristle, anogenital present for neighbor loud shrill only) for significantly longer, and emitted significantly more intergroup agonistic vocalizations (twitter, loud shrill), at a high frequency of intergroup agonistic neighbor vocalizations (twitter, loud shrill) than at low. The marmosets were also significantly more likely to engage in bristle behavior immediately after hearing a neighbor intergroup aggressive call (twitter, loud shrill) than directly beforehand. High neighbor intragroup agonistic calls (chatter) were associated with significantly longer spent in related behavior (composite of: attack, chase, steal food). Affiliative behaviors (share food, grooming invite) were engaged in by marmosets for significantly longer at higher frequencies of affiliative neighbor chirp calls than at low. Marmosets were also significantly more likely to perform food sharing and active affiliative contact immediately after rather than before hearing a neighbor chirp call. Our findings suggest that neighbor vocalizations influence marmoset behavior through social contagion and indicate that the neighbor effect for affiliation and aggression generalizes to the marmoset.
研究人员已经证明了圈养黑猩猩在亲和性和攻击性邻域发声中的邻居效应。我们将邻居效应的研究扩展到新世界猴,即白脸卷尾猴。我们收集了 31 只焦点个体的发声和行为数据以及同时发生的邻域发声,这些邻域发声分为三类:群体内和群体间攻击以及群体内亲和。我们调查了邻域发声是否会对同一行为类别内的焦点行为产生影响。我们使用近似随机化配对样本 t 检验进行数据分析。我们发现,卷尾猴在听到邻域发出响亮刺耳的高声鸣叫时,表现出群体间攻击行为(竖起毛发,向邻域展示肛门生殖器)的时间显著延长,发出的群体间攻击叫声(吱吱叫,高声尖叫)的次数显著增多,而且邻域间群体攻击叫声(吱吱叫,高声尖叫)的频率也很高,比低频率时更频繁。卷尾猴在听到邻域间的攻击性叫声(吱吱叫,高声尖叫)后,也更有可能立即进行竖起毛发的行为,而不是在之前。邻域间的群体攻击性叫声(叽叽喳喳)频率较高时,与相关行为(攻击、追逐、偷食)的时间显著延长有关。当邻域间亲和性叫声(啁啾)频率较高时,卷尾猴进行亲和行为(分享食物、邀请梳理毛发)的时间显著延长。卷尾猴在听到邻域的啁啾声后,更有可能立即进行食物分享和积极的亲和接触,而不是在之前。我们的研究结果表明,邻域发声通过社会传染影响卷尾猴的行为,并表明亲和性和攻击性的邻居效应普遍存在于卷尾猴中。