Leca Jean-Baptiste, Gunst Noëlle, Pelletier Amanda N, Vasey Paul L, Nahallage Charmalie A D, Watanabe Kunio, Huffman Michael A
Department of Psychology, University of Lethbridge, 4401 University Drive, Lethbridge, AB, T1K3M4, Canada.
Department of Sociology and Anthropology, University of Sri Jayewardenepura, Nugegoda, Sri Lanka.
Primates. 2016 Jul;57(3):333-8. doi: 10.1007/s10329-016-0518-2. Epub 2016 Feb 10.
Cultural primatology (i.e., the study of behavioral traditions in nonhuman primates as a window into the evolution of human cultural capacities) was founded in Japan by Kinji Imanishi in the early 1950s. This relatively new research area straddles different disciplines and now benefits from collaborations between Japanese and Western primatologists. In this paper, we return to the cradle of cultural primatology by revisiting our original articles on behavioral innovations and traditions in Japanese macaques. For the past 35 years, our international team of biologists, psychologists and anthropologists from Japan, France, Sri Lanka, the USA and Canada, has been taking an integrative approach to addressing the influence of environmental, sociodemographic, developmental, cognitive and behavioral constraints on the appearance, diffusion, and maintenance of behavioral traditions in Macaca fuscata across various domains; namely, feeding innovation, tool use, object play, and non-conceptive sex.
文化灵长类学(即把对非人类灵长类动物行为传统的研究作为洞察人类文化能力进化的一个窗口)于20世纪50年代初由今西锦司在日本创立。这个相对较新的研究领域跨越了不同学科,如今得益于日本和西方灵长类动物学家之间的合作。在本文中,我们通过回顾我们最初关于日本猕猴行为创新和传统的文章,回到了文化灵长类学的发源地。在过去的35年里,我们由来自日本、法国、斯里兰卡、美国和加拿大的生物学家、心理学家和人类学家组成的国际团队,一直采用综合方法来探讨环境、社会人口统计学、发育、认知和行为限制因素对日本猕猴行为传统在各个领域(即觅食创新、工具使用、物体玩耍和非概念性性行为)的出现、传播和维持的影响。