Henry Laurence, Craig Adrian J F K, Lemasson Alban, Hausberger Martine
Laboratoire d'éthologie animale et humaine, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, UMR 6552, Université de Rennes 1 Rennes, France.
Department of Zoology and Entomology, Rhodes University Grahamstown, South Africa.
Front Psychol. 2015 Sep 28;6:1416. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01416. eCollection 2015.
Turn-taking in conversation appears to be a common feature in various human cultures and this universality raises questions about its biological basis and evolutionary trajectory. Functional convergence is a widespread phenomenon in evolution, revealing sometimes striking functional similarities between very distant species even though the mechanisms involved may be different. Studies on mammals (including non-human primates) and bird species with different levels of social coordination reveal that temporal and structural regularities in vocal interactions may depend on the species' social structure. Here we test the hypothesis that turn-taking and associated rules of conversations may be an adaptive response to the requirements of social life, by testing the applicability of turn-taking rules to an animal model, the European starling. Birdsong has for many decades been considered as one of the best models of human language and starling songs have been well described in terms of vocal production and perception. Starlings do have vocal interactions where alternating patterns predominate. Observational and experimental data on vocal interactions reveal that (1) there are indeed clear temporal and structural regularities, (2) the temporal and structural patterning is influenced by the immediate social context, the general social situation, the individual history, and the internal state of the emitter. Comparison of phylogenetically close species of Sturnids reveals that the alternating pattern of vocal interactions varies greatly according to the species' social structure, suggesting that interactional regularities may have evolved together with social systems. These findings lead to solid bases of discussion on the evolution of communication rules in relation to social evolution. They will be discussed also in terms of processes, at the light of recent neurobiological findings.
对话中的轮流发言似乎是人类各种文化中的一个共同特征,这种普遍性引发了关于其生物学基础和进化轨迹的问题。功能趋同是进化中一种普遍存在的现象,它有时揭示了非常远缘的物种之间惊人的功能相似性,尽管所涉及的机制可能不同。对具有不同社会协调水平的哺乳动物(包括非人类灵长类动物)和鸟类物种的研究表明,声音互动中的时间和结构规律可能取决于物种的社会结构。在这里,我们通过测试轮流发言规则对动物模型——欧洲椋鸟的适用性,来检验轮流发言及相关对话规则可能是对社会生活需求的一种适应性反应这一假设。几十年来,鸟鸣一直被认为是人类语言的最佳模型之一,椋鸟的歌声在发声产生和感知方面已经得到了很好的描述。椋鸟确实存在以交替模式为主的声音互动。关于声音互动的观察和实验数据表明:(1)确实存在明确的时间和结构规律;(2)时间和结构模式受到即时社会背景、一般社会状况、个体经历以及发声者内部状态的影响。对椋鸟科系统发育关系较近的物种进行比较发现,声音互动的交替模式根据物种的社会结构有很大差异,这表明互动规律可能与社会系统共同进化。这些发现为关于与社会进化相关的交流规则进化的讨论奠定了坚实基础。根据最近的神经生物学研究结果,我们还将从过程的角度对这些发现进行讨论。