Toarmino Camille R, Wong Lauren, Miller Cory T
Department of Psychology, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093, USA
Cortical Systems and Behavior Laboratory, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093, USA.
Biol Lett. 2017 Jan;13(1). doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2016.0934.
An audience can have a profound effect on the dynamics of communicative interactions. As a result, non-human primates often adjust their social decision-making strategies depending on the audience composition at a given time. Here we sought to test how the unique vocal behaviour of multiple audience members affected decisions to communicate. To address this issue, we developed a novel experimental paradigm in which common marmosets directly interacted with multiple 'virtual monkeys' (VMs), each of whom represented an individual marmoset with distinct vocal behaviour. This active social signalling paradigm provided subjects an opportunity to interact with and learn about the behaviour of each VM in the network and apply this knowledge in subsequent communicative decisions. We found that subjects' propensity to interact with particular VMs was determined by the behaviour of each VM in the audience and suggests that marmoset social decision-making strategies are highly adaptive to nuances of the immediate communication network.
观众会对交流互动的动态过程产生深远影响。因此,非人类灵长类动物常常会根据特定时刻的观众构成来调整它们的社交决策策略。在此,我们试图测试多个观众成员的独特发声行为是如何影响交流决策的。为解决这个问题,我们开发了一种新颖的实验范式,即普通狨猴直接与多个“虚拟猴子”(VMs)进行互动,每个“虚拟猴子”都代表一只具有独特发声行为的个体狨猴。这种主动的社交信号范式为实验对象提供了一个与网络中的每个VM互动并了解其行为的机会,并将这些知识应用于后续的交流决策中。我们发现,实验对象与特定VM互动的倾向取决于观众中每个VM的行为,这表明狨猴的社交决策策略对即时交流网络的细微差别具有高度适应性。