British Academy Centenary Research Project, Institute of Cognitive and Evolutionary Anthropology, University of Oxford, 64 Banbury Road, Oxford OX2 6PN, UK.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2012 Jul 5;367(1597):1837-46. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2011.0217.
Primate societies are characterized by bonded social relationships of a kind that are rare in other mammal taxa. These bonded relationships, which provide the basis for coalitions, are underpinned by an endorphin mechanism mediated by social grooming. However, bonded relationships of this kind impose constraints on the size of social groups that are possible. When ecological pressures have demanded larger groups, primates have had to evolve new mechanisms to facilitate bonding. This has involved increasing the size of vocal and visual communication repertoires, increasing the time devoted to social interaction and developing a capacity to manage two-tier social relationships (strong and weak ties). I consider the implications of these constraints for the evolution of human social communities and argue that laughter was an early evolutionary innovation that helped bridge the bonding gap between the group sizes characteristic of chimpanzees and australopithecines and those in later hominins.
灵长类动物的社会关系以一种在其他哺乳动物中很少见的方式联系在一起。这种联系为联盟提供了基础,由社会梳理介导的内啡肽机制支撑。然而,这种联系关系对可能的社会群体规模施加了限制。当生态压力要求更大的群体时,灵长类动物不得不进化出新的机制来促进联系。这涉及到增加声音和视觉交流曲目,增加用于社会互动的时间,并发展管理两层社会关系(强关系和弱关系)的能力。我考虑了这些限制对人类社会群体进化的影响,并认为笑声是一种早期的进化创新,有助于弥合黑猩猩和南方古猿与后来的人类之间的群体规模之间的联系差距。