Amici Federica, Aureli Filippo, Call Josep
Department of Comparative and Developmental Psychology, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Deutscher Platz 6, 04103, Leipzig, Germany,
Primates. 2014 Jan;55(1):113-8. doi: 10.1007/s10329-013-0375-1. Epub 2013 Aug 24.
Contagious yawning is a form of response facilitation found in humans and other primates in which observing a model yawning enhances the chance that the observer will also yawn. Because contagious yawning seems to be more easily triggered when models are conspecifics or have a strong social bond with the observer, it has been proposed that contagious yawning is linked to empathy. A possible way to test this hypothesis is to analyze whether individuals' responses differ when they observe models yawning or performing different involuntary (i.e., nose wiping, scratching) and voluntary (i.e., hand closing, wrist shaking) actions that are not linked to empathy. In this study, we tested the four great ape species with two different setups by exposing them to a human experimenter repeatedly performing these actions online, and video-recorded conspecifics repeatedly performing these actions on a screen. We examined which behaviors were subject to response facilitation, whether response facilitation was triggered by both human models and video-recorded conspecifics, and whether all species showed evidence of response facilitation. Our results showed that chimpanzees yawned significantly more when and shortly after watching videos of conspecifics (but not humans) yawning than in control conditions, and they did not do so as a response to increased levels of anxiety. For all other behaviors, no species produced more target actions when being exposed to either model than under control conditions. Moreover, the individuals that were more "reactive" when watching yawning videos were not more reactive when exposed to other actions. Since, at least in chimpanzees, (1) subjects only showed response facilitation when they were exposed to yawning and (2) only if models were conspecifics, it appears that contagious yawning is triggered by unique mechanisms and might be linked to empathy.
传染性打哈欠是在人类和其他灵长类动物中发现的一种反应促进形式,即观察到一个打哈欠的榜样会增加观察者也打哈欠的可能性。由于当榜样是同种个体或与观察者有很强的社会联系时,传染性打哈欠似乎更容易被触发,因此有人提出传染性打哈欠与同理心有关。检验这一假设的一种可能方法是分析当个体观察榜样打哈欠或执行与同理心无关的不同非自愿动作(如擦鼻子、抓挠)和自愿动作(如握拳、抖手腕)时,他们的反应是否不同。在这项研究中,我们用两种不同的设置对四种大型猿类进行了测试,让它们接触在网上反复执行这些动作的人类实验者,并录制同种个体在屏幕上反复执行这些动作的视频。我们研究了哪些行为会受到反应促进,反应促进是否由人类榜样和录制的同种个体触发,以及所有物种是否都表现出反应促进的证据。我们的结果表明,黑猩猩在观看同种个体(而非人类)打哈欠的视频时及之后不久,打哈欠的次数明显多于对照条件下,而且它们这样做并非是对焦虑水平升高的反应。对于所有其他行为,没有一个物种在接触任何一种榜样时比在对照条件下产生更多的目标动作。此外,观看打哈欠视频时反应更“敏感”的个体在接触其他动作时并不更敏感。由于至少在黑猩猩中,(1)受试者只有在接触打哈欠行为时才表现出反应促进,(2)并且只有当榜样是同种个体时才会如此,所以似乎传染性打哈欠是由独特的机制触发的,并且可能与同理心有关。