Department of Psychology, Yale University, New Haven, CT, 06511, USA.
Department of Neuroscience, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, 06520, USA.
Sci Rep. 2017 Sep 12;7(1):11274. doi: 10.1038/s41598-017-11763-3.
Optimality principles guide how animals adapt to changing environments. During foraging for nonsocial resources such as food and water, species across taxa obey a strategy that maximizes resource harvest rate. However, it remains unknown whether foraging for social resources also obeys such a strategic principle. We investigated how primates forage for social information conveyed by conspecific facial expressions using the framework of optimal foraging theory. We found that the canonical principle of Marginal Value Theorem (MVT) also applies to social resources. Consistent with MVT, rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) spent more time foraging for social information when alternative sources of information were farther away compared to when they were closer by. A comparison of four models of patch-leaving behavior confirmed that the MVT framework provided the best fit to the observed foraging behavior. This analysis further demonstrated that patch-leaving decisions were not driven simply by the declining value of the images in the patch, but instead were dependent upon both the instantaneous social value intake rate and current time in the patch.
最优原则指导动物如何适应不断变化的环境。在寻找非社会性资源(如食物和水)时,不同分类群的物种都遵循一种策略,即最大限度地提高资源收获率。然而,对于社会性资源的觅食是否也遵循这样的策略原则还不得而知。我们使用最优觅食理论的框架研究了灵长类动物如何觅食同类面部表情所传达的社会信息。我们发现,边际价值定理(MVT)的典型原则也适用于社会资源。与 MVT 一致,恒河猴(Macaca mulatta)在信息源较远时,会比在较近时花费更多的时间来获取社会信息。对四种斑块离开行为模型的比较证实,MVT 框架最能拟合观察到的觅食行为。这项分析进一步表明,斑块离开决策不仅仅是由斑块中图像的价值下降驱动的,而是取决于当前的社会价值摄取率和当前在斑块中的时间。