Department of Biology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104;
Department of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2018 Feb 27;115(9):1974-1979. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1717572115. Epub 2018 Feb 5.
Vocalizations are a pervasive feature of nonhuman primate social life, yet we know surprisingly little about their function. We review studies supporting the hypothesis that many primate vocalizations function to facilitate social interactions by reducing uncertainty about the signaler's intentions and likely behavior. Such interactions help to establish and maintain the social bonds that increase reproductive success. Compared with humans, songbirds, and a few other mammals, primates have small vocal repertoires that show little acoustic modification during development. However, their ability to modify call usage is extensive and tuned to variation in the social context, including the historical relationship between caller and listener and the caller's assessment of how a listener is likely to respond. We suggest parallels between the decision to vocalize and neurophysiological studies of other, nonvocal social decisions between interacting monkeys. The selective factors driving the early stages of language evolution may have come from the need to make decisions about when and how to call within the context of social challenges.
发声是灵长类动物社会生活中普遍存在的特征,但我们对其功能知之甚少。我们回顾了支持以下假设的研究:许多灵长类动物的发声通过减少对信号者意图和可能行为的不确定性,从而有助于促进社会互动。这种互动有助于建立和维持增加繁殖成功率的社会联系。与人类、鸣禽和其他少数哺乳动物相比,灵长类动物的发声能力相对较小,在发育过程中很少进行声学修饰。然而,它们调整叫声使用的能力非常广泛,可以根据社会环境的变化进行调整,包括呼叫者和听众之间的历史关系,以及呼叫者对听众可能做出何种反应的评估。我们认为,在决定发声和研究猴子之间其他非发声的社会互动决策的神经生理学之间存在相似之处。推动语言进化早期阶段的选择因素可能来自于在社会挑战的背景下决定何时以及如何发声的需要。